The Doppler Quarterly Summer 2019 | Page 51

• Security – New platforms and processes will require automation to manage the security and risk postures, because cloud goes faster than humans can manage. • Finance – For new chargeback and billing tools to give IT teams visibility on consumption. Cloud adoption will affect nearly every aspect of your orga- nization. Therefore, it is actually more a strategic direction and leadership initiative than a technology decision. Adopting cloud also requires assigning dedicated teams, and deciding to properly fund your cloud program. This means team members will only work on cloud-related activ- ities, and their entire focus will be on getting the enterprise to the cloud securely – not just kicking the tires with a proof of concept or a pilot. A cloud team whose members still have their day jobs is a sure indication that: • There is not a full commitment to the cloud. • The effort required is misunderstood. • There is a lack of executive sponsorship. When an organization truly understands the benefits of cloud and their cloud native strategy — and there are many such organizations — the sponsor can create a proposal so compelling that no CEO could ignore it. #3 – Establish a Cloud Business Office Cloud adoption will have an enormous impact on your com- pany, evolving processes that have not been seriously touched in decades. For the first time, developers are able to create and modify their infrastructure requirements using software. The implications of such power are both dazzling and frightening. Software development has lived in a static world of change management, where the critical nature of the business impact has created tight control processes and long approval cycles. Thus, the need for a Cloud Business Office (CBO). The CBO serves as the central point of decision-making and communication for your cloud program – both internally and externally. More than a cloud “center of excellence,” the CBO is a permanent operational and governing body that directs and guides all aspects of your cloud program, from first establishing a common definition for what cloud means for your organization, to leading the implementation and ongoing operations. Members of the CBO fall into two categories: Full-Time and Part-Time. Full-Time CBO members are leaders who have daily responsibility for the successful adoption, implemen- tation and management of cloud in your organization. These include: • Cloud Program Leadership • Technical Operations Leadership • Chief Architect(s) • Security Operations Leadership Part-Time CBO members are leaders who have a vested interest in the success of the cloud program and need visi- bility into the process. These include: • Legal and Risk Leaders • HR Leaders • Procurement • IT Finance • Application Owners and Business Units (BU’s may have a full-time role for a short duration during their onboarding process) The cloud has completely changed how we consume and operate IT. The agile nature of cloud technology enables dramatic benefits for the enterprise and touches almost every department within an organization. In addition, com- pared to on-premises environments, the cloud requires far fewer people to manage and operate it, so you need a tighter, more cohesive team to break down silos. Because you are combining operations, development, infrastructure, risk and finance, you need a central set of processes. These include: • Project management • Technical decision-making • Application owner onboarding • Technology training • Risk / Security decision-making • Organizational change management and training • Financial governance • Operational services and governance • Vendor management SUMMER 2019 | THE DOPPLER | 49