Intelligent CIO Africa Issue 23 | Page 38

FEATURE: CIO’S PRIORITY FOR 2019 //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// Despite prevalent economic challenges, the IDC says that IT spending by organisations in South Africa has grown at a faster rate than GDP over the past year, with cloud computing and services driving a large part of this. Craig Freer, Executive Head: Cloud at Vox, says that companies are not fully aware of the challenges faced with moving to the cloud. T o mitigate potential risks, CIOs need to break their current IT infrastructure down to a granular level to gain an understanding of the business requirements and to look at the value that IT delivers to the business. They must obtain a view of what technologies are in place, including a full view of the IT ecosystem and all its dependencies. This information can then be used to produce a total cost of ownership comparison to demonstrate the gains that can be made by making the shift to cloud computing, as a cloud architecture blueprint and implementation roadmap that brings together a public, private and/or hybrid cloud solution for the business. Managed services Although many companies are adopting a cloud strategy, the majority see this as a phased approach, not a short-term goal. This means a continued reliance on on-site computing as their cloud strategy evolves. Added to this is the current ICT skills shortage in South Africa and as a result, more companies are turning to managed services as a business model. This brings us to the essence of cloud, which is not necessarily the platform but the managed services and applications that are enabled and made available to companies in order to optimise their businesses and the resources that they have access to. Businesses need to undergo a fundamental skills and mindset change and IT departments under the leadership of the CIO need to move away from a ´break and fix´ approach to being more SLA orientated. Investing in skills that focus less on hardware and more on software will become a necessity, or CIOs can consider shifting to vendors that offer not only a cloud solution, but also a managed services layer. CIOs will increasingly need to think about whether their organisations will own the skills the organisation requires to operate in the cloud, or if there is a vendor relationship management model required. In each instance, it will require a skills change across the IT department. The CIO will need to find a partner that not only understands how to translate a cloud strategy into business reality, but also the requirements and skills for cloud transition. The reality is that the market is moving to cloud – with a clear split between private Understand cloud’s new essence; drive the business forward 38 INTELLIGENTCIO www.intelligentcio.com