This blog examines the business implications of IT service trends ranging from software-as-a-service (SaaS) and cloud computing to managed services and other on-demand services.

June 28, 2010

EasyVista Wins Best of SaaS Showplace Award

THINKstrategies announced today that EasyVista Inc., member of the Staff&Line Group, has been named the latest winner of the Best of SaaS Showplace (BoSS) Awards program, which is aimed at promoting the measurable business benefits being delivered by today’s Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) solutions.

EasyVista.com IT Service Management and IT Asset Management solution covers all ITIL v3 processes in a single, integrated yet modular product. EasyVista.com has been designed for quick and easy deployment and enables users to extensively customize their application through a totally codeless interface. EasyVista.com also reduces recurrent costs making it significantly more affordable than conventional on-premise solutions.

Click here to read about the measurable business benefits which EasyVista produced for its customers which earned it a BoSS Award.

Click here to read more about the BoSS Award program and to apply for an award.

Based on the success of the BoSS Awards program which focuses on SaaS solutions, THINKstrategies has launched the Cloud Computing Business Value (CCBV) Awards program to recognize companies which are delivering Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) and Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) solutions producing measurable business benefits for their customers. For more information regarding the CCBV Awards, go to http://www.thinkstrategies.com/cloudcomputingawards.html.

June 24, 2010

THINKstrategies’ Perspectives on Internet Evolution

I’m pleased to now be blogging on TechWeb’s Internet Evolution macro-site focused on the future of the Internet.

In addition to my regular postings here, I’ll be providing more of THINKstrategies’ perspectives regarding key issues, opportunities and challenges surrounding the rapidly evolving cloud computing environment, including Software-as-a-Service (SaaS), Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) and Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) solutions.

The Internet Evolution blog represents the latest media outlet partnering with THINKstrategies to distribute and promote our perspective on these increasingly important market trends. These media outlets include Datamation, E-Commerce Times and Seeking Alpha.

I hope you find our perspectives of value and welcome your feedback and additional suggestions regarding other media outlets which you think would benefit from our perspectives.

June 21, 2010

Combating Cloud Computing Skeptics

A commentary on InfoWorld’s website today caught my attention and compelled me to quickly respond in this space to try to once again set the cynics straight about the viability and business benefits of cloud computing.

The author of the commentary entitled, “Confessions of a cloud skeptic”, suggests that the only thing new about cloud computing is the false promise that you can move an entire data center operation to a third-party hosting facility.

I believe the author of this column got the newness re: cloud computing entirely wrong. It is the opposite which makes cloud computing special.

Specifically, it is the hyper-elasticity and self-provisioning capabilities which make cloud computing disruptive. Amazon has pioneered and dramatically changed the way compute power is packaged, priced and delivered.

As a result, organizations and even individuals can now purchase compute power in tiny increments to meet their specific needs. This mitigates many of the risks associated with traditional hosting and IT outsourcing which entailed long-term contracts and inflexible services.

It is the new cloud computing packaging, pricing and delivery model which is attracting companies of all sizes to augment their operations, and in some greenfield cases even run their entire operations, on third-party Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) solutions.

These IaaS offerings also represent a model for success which many enterprises are trying to emulate in the form of internal clouds.

While relying entirely on a third-party cloud services won’t be feasible for most organizations, that doesn’t discount the tremendous value cloud services provide.

Obviously, organizations must still enter into these arrangements with open eyes regarding the risks. But, most companies who have been among the early adopters have come away pleased, and are planning to expand their use of cloud services, and are even becoming net-promoters of these services.

As the cloud computing success stories multiply, I challenge the skeptics to find many publicly reported horror stories about cloud computing service failures which suggest organization should move in the opposite direction.

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GoodData Wins Best of SaaS Showplace Award

THINKstrategies announced today that GoodData has been named the latest winner of the Best of SaaS Showplace (BoSS) Awards program, which is aimed at promoting the measurable business benefits being delivered by today’s Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) solutions.

The BoSS Awards is an ongoing program which recognizes SaaS companies that are producing tangible business benefits for specific user organizations. These benefits can include increased sales, lower costs, higher customer satisfaction, faster operations and greater profitability.

GoodData helps companies track the metrics that drive their business by making it easy to collect, report on and share data across marketing, sales, support and operations. The company does this through a Cloud Business Intelligence (BI) Platform that delivers business dashboards in weeks instead of months.

Click here to read more about GoodData’s award winning SaaS BI capabilities which earned the company a BoSS Award.

Click here to read more about the BoSS Award program and to apply for an award.

The success of the BoSS Awards program has led THINKstrategies to launch the Cloud Computing Business Value (CCBV) Awards program to recognize companies which are delivering Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) and Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) solutions producing measurable business benefits for their customers. For more information regarding the CCBV Awards, go to http://www.thinkstrategies.com/cloudcomputingawards.html.

June 20, 2010

Reducing the Costs of Online Outages

Intuit’s major outage last week served as a harsh, yet valuable reminder for all of us about the serious risks which underlie our growing dependence on third-party, ‘cloud’-based services.

The irony about the timing of Intuit’s service failure is that the company has been escalating its marketing efforts to position it as a leading provider of cloud services. For instance, Intuit’s SVP/CTO, Tayloe Stansbury, was a keynote presenter at last month’s SIIA All About the Cloud Conference in San Francisco where he boasted about Intuit surpassing $1 billion in cloud-based service revenues.

The company’s CEO, Brad Smith, did a good job quickly apologizing to Intuit’s over 300,000 customers who were affected by the outage. His blogpost also explained the cause of the disruption and made a public commitment to put new policies and procedures in place to prevent the problem from occurring again.

Smith’s response was certainly better than that of BP’s CEO, who has succeeded in alienating public officials as well as the public at large with his arrogant actions and unconvincing statements.

In order to counteract any potential backlash as a result of this incident that could derail the rapid growth of the market, the cloud computing industry needs to take a number of immediate steps to reduce the likelihood of similar events and alleviate the impact on customers.

As a strategy and marketing guy, I’m not qualified to recommend specific technical steps which Intuit and other cloud vendors should take to mitigate the risks of software or system failures and safeguard against manual process mistakes.

Instead, I will suggest some simple measures which vendors must take to reduce the occurrence and repercussions of these incidents:

  • Invest in redundant systems even if it adds operating costs. Smart customers are willing to pay more if they are convinced they will be safer.
  • Train and certify employees as meeting industry standards. Smart customers will select vendors who boast skilled employees and have the certifications to show for it.
  • Act fast to notify customers when something goes wrong and keep them informed of your efforts to resolve the problem. Customers understand that ’stuff’ happens and appreciate vendors who are proactive in responding to an issue and communicate about the status.
  • Ask for customer feedback and suggestions. Customers are loyal to vendors who seek and respond to their input.
  • Create public notification systems and performance scorecards.Salesforce.com has pioneered this idea with its trust.salesforce.com website which provides real-time reporting of its service availability. Customers love transparency.
  • Develop Service Level Agreements (SLAs) with teeth. Customers want contractual agreements which clearly state the provider obligations, outline their escalation policies to remedy issues, offer meaningful penalties, and prescribe grounds for termination.

Although a strong argument can still be made that this type of outage is rare and most cloud computing providers are far more reliable (and secure) than the majority of enterprises, this latest incident makes it imperative that the cloud computing industry quickly develop off-line solutions which augment their online services to enable their customers to continue to operate even during a service outage.

I’ve been advocating for more than a year about a new definition of location independence which permits customers to take advantage of off-line, on-premise SaaS alternatives such as appliances and applets. 

These on-premise platforms and tools are becoming increasingly feasible from a functional and economic standpoint as the technology, service delivery methodology and business models mature. They also are in keeping with the growing interest among corporate decision-makers in private or internal cloud options.

While the idea of private or internal clouds undercuts some of the potential economic and operational benefits of the cloud computing ideal, it is still a step in the right direction and can alleviate the angst many business executives and IT folks  have about the current state of the cloud, especially in light of Intuit’s latest problems.

June 14, 2010

Security On-Demand Wins Best of SaaS Showplace Award

THINKstrategies announced today that Security On-Demand has been named the latest winner of the Best of SaaS Showplace (BoSS) Awards program, which is aimed at promoting the measurable business benefits being delivered by today’s Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) solutions.

The BoSS Awards is an ongoing program which recognizes SaaS companies that are producing tangible business benefits for specific user organizations. These benefits can include increased sales, lower costs, higher customer satisfaction, faster operations and greater profitability.

Security On-Demand is a leading provider of comprehensive SaaS-based compliance and security solutions which help organizations maintain compliance with industry regulations, manage risk, and protect themselves from security threats.

Click here to read more about the business benefits which Security On-Demand is delivering to its customers.

Click here to learn more about the BoSS Awards program and to apply for an award.

Based on the success of the BoSS Awards program which focuses on SaaS solutions, THINKstrategies has launched the Cloud Computing Business Value (CCBV) Awards program to recognize companies which are delivering Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) and Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) solutions producing measurable business benefits for their customers. For more information regarding the CCBV Awards, go to http://www.thinkstrategies.com/cloudcomputingawards.html.

June 7, 2010

FPX Wins Best of SaaS Showplace Award

THINKstrategies announced today that FPX, LLC has been named the latest winner of the Best of SaaS Showplace (BoSS) Awards program, which is aimed at promoting the measurable business benefits being delivered by today’s Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) solutions.

The BoSS Awards is an ongoing program which recognizes SaaS companies that are producing tangible business benefits for specific user organizations. These benefits can include increased sales, lower costs, higher customer satisfaction, faster operations and greater profitability.

FPX provides a Configure-Price-Quote application that guides salespeople through the product configuration process. FPX’s configuration engine handles complex pricing issues to enable sales people to quickly produce professional, branded proposals that present the configured product in an understandable format. By eliminating configuration and pricing errors, FPX clients experience lower costs, faster sales cycles and happier customers.

Click here to read about the measurable business benefits which FPX has delivered to its customers.

Click here to learn more about the BoSS Award program and to apply for  an award.

Based on the success of the BoSS Awards program which focuses on SaaS solutions, THINKstrategies has launched the Cloud Computing Business Value (CCBV) Awards program to recognize companies which are delivering Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) and Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) solutions producing measurable business benefits for their customers. For more information regarding the CCBV Awards, go to http://www.thinkstrategies.com/cloudcomputingawards.html.

June 3, 2010

Spiceworks Surpasses One Million Users, Celebrates Largest IT Community

Yesterday, Spiceworks announced that its user base now exceeds one million IT professionals across nearly 200 countries. The company’s rapid growth has dispelled a number of industry myths and represents a prime example of how I’ve been suggesting the tech industry is being redefined.

Here’s a quick list of some of the myths busted by Spiceworks’ success,

  • Ad-based, free services don’t work in the business-to-business (B2B) market,
  • IT professionals are not willing to use ad-based, freemium services to satisfy their day-to-day management needs, and
  • IT professionals are too concerned about the security issues associated with social networking to join an online community like Facebook.

Welcome, to Spiceworks — an ad-based, freemium service aimed at IT professionals which not only gives them access to a solid set of management tools, but also gives them the benefit of sharing information and insight with their peers through a Facebook-like online community.

Spiceworks hasn’t only built a strong customer base of IT users for its own management solutions, it has also created a marketplace for a widening array of hardware, software and service vendors seeking to sell to this powerful segment.

And, now that the company has built a critical mass of customers, it is harvesting the data generated by this community to not only document its significance but also deliver new forms of value to its users, such as benchmark statistics and industry best practices. This is an idea which I’ve been advocating for a while as you can read in my past column in Ecommerce Times.

As a result, Spiceworks is not only sitting on top of a growing population of customers, but also creating a club which its members feel proud to be a part of and are encouraging to grow. This is the ideal of building a community of net-promoters which has made Facebook such a success.

Spiceworks is applying these same principles to the IT industry and forcing traditional players to re-think their go-to-market strategies.

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June 2, 2010

HP Restructuring to Capture Cloud Wave

Yesterday’s announcement by HP that it is cutting 9000 workers and hiring another 6000 as part of a $1 billion multi-year effort to redesign its data center operations and automate its enterprise services is the latest indication of the traumatic impact which today’s cloud computing phenomenon is having on the tech industry.

HP readily admitted in its announcement that its goal is to,

“…Consolidate Enterprise Services’ commercial data centers, management platforms, networks, tools and applications to create a more scalable, modernized and automated IT infrastructure that will better serve its clients’ needs.”

Although the company didn’t specify where its cuts would take place, I suspect that the bulk of the downsizing effort within the Enterprise Services division will involve offloading the legacy data center facilities and staff which came from the EDS acquisition.

My sources within the company have confirmed my original concerns about the acquisition that the EDS deal brought more baggage and little innovation to HP’s oldline outsourcing business.

Anybody who follows the traditional IT outsourcing business knows that it has suffered as a result of the emergence of more cost-effective and less risky cloud computing alternatives.

Like the incumbent software vendors (ISVs) who have had a tough time keeping pace with the rapid rise of Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) insurgents, traditional hardware (“systems”) vendors are facing a similar challenge in the Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) segment of the cloud computing market.

After years of internal infighting, which did little to bring about a clear cloud computing strategy or set of solutions, HP is now forced to make dramatic moves in order to ensure that it doesn’t fall significantly behind the cloud computing leaders–Amazon, Google, Rackspace, etc.

Unfortunately, HP’s housecleaning efforts will likely cause even more internal strife and distractions among the company’s employees before it produces tangible business benefits for its customers.

However, if HP doesn’t take these painful steps it risks far greater consequences as the cloud computing movement becomes mainstream.

HP’s efforts to rearchitect its operations and retool its staff is not only an important bellweather for tech vendors, but should send a clear message to CIOs and corporate executives with enterprise organizations as well. They should be taking a hard look at the way they operate to ensure it is relevant in today’s rapidly changing business environment.

I recently recorded two podcasts for TechTarget’s SearchCloudComputing web portal regarding the new IT skills and vendor management requirements which are critical in cloud computing.

June 1, 2010

Financial Transmission Network Inc. (FTNI) Wins Best of SaaS Showplace Award

THINKstrategies announced today that Financial Transmission Network, Inc. (FTNI) has been named the latest winner of the Best of SaaS Showplace (BoSS) Awards program, which is aimed at promoting the measurable business benefits being delivered by today’s Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) solutions.

The BoSS Awards is an ongoing program which recognizes SaaS companies that are producing tangible business benefits for specific user organizations. These benefits can include increased sales, lower costs, higher customer satisfaction, faster operations and greater profitability.

FTNI’s SaaS ePayment platform offers extensive configuration options that make it ideally suited to a wide variety of industry verticals. FTNI’s PCI compliant solution is uniquely designed to offer banks and merchants a solution that not only clears multiple payment types but also reflects that payment activity in the merchant’s A/R system.

Click here to read about the measurable business benefits which FTNI’s customers have gained from its SaaS solution to earn FTNI a BoSS Award.

Click here to learn more about the BoSS Awards program and to apply for an award.

Based on the success of the BoSS Awards program which focuses on SaaS solutions, THINKstrategies has launched the Cloud Computing Business Value (CCBV) Awards program to recognize companies which are delivering Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) and Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) solutions producing measurable business benefits for their customers. For more information regarding the CCBV Awards, go to http://www.thinkstrategies.com/cloudcomputingawards.html.