Sequestration burst out of obscurity and entered our
household vocabulary in 2013. It got our
attention because the impact of it is $1.2 trillion in automatic spending cuts
from the Federal budget over the next ten years. About $85B of these cuts will occur by
September of 2013 - and these cuts are being disproportionately applied: Once you exempt the sacred programs, what’s less
sacred (like Federal I.T. spending) is going to get hit hard. Forrester Research analyst Andrew Bartels
expects that the Federal budget cuts will shave at least $12B out of 2013 U.S.
tech spending (http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9237240/The_sequester_will_hurt_tech_nationally).
So what’s to be done? Computerworld points out that “Dale Luddeke, chair
of the Industry Advisory Council (IAC), an IT industry group expects to see a
shift in government to things with cost savings attributes, such as open
source, and agile development and cloud technology.”
Federal agency CIOs are already there: At this year’s Cloud Computing for DoD and
Government Summit held in Washington D.C. on Feb 26, Richard Spires, then CIO
of the Dept of Homeland Security, said in a keynote that he was looking to take
out $500M of IT spend from his $5B IT budget and was looking to cloud computing
as a primary vehicle to accomplish this.
There you have it: Cloud
to the rescue.
This is not surprising, given that public cloud computing has
been shown to reduce IT infrastructure spending by 37% (http://arxiv.org/pdf/1002.3492.pdf)
or more. And Cloud spending has the
additional benefit of converting the capex model (“pay up-front”) to an opex
model (“pay-as-you-go”) which gives much more flexibility.
This is not new news.
Cloud computing’s promise has been well known to the government which
has had a ‘Cloud First’ mandate for two years now. But implementation progress towards this goal
has been tepid according to the GAO (http://www.gao.gov/assets/600/592249.pdf),
due in part to lack of skills, guidance, tools, security and the need for new
processes (such as cloud procurement).
However, there is one stand out government entity that has
overcome these barriers and seen great success using cloud computing to reduce
costs and improve agility: this is the
Dept of Information Resources of the State of Texas.
Nearly two years ago, the State of Texas implemented the
Texas Cloud Self-Service Portal (http://www.dir.texas.gov/SiteCollectionDocuments/Texas.gov/ptco.pdf).
State Agencies who used the portal were able to reduce IT
infrastructure costs by up to 30% and, more importantly, were able to
significantly reduce deployment times for new IT resources from months to
days. This portal was so successful that
it is now being extended to all 200 agencies in the State.
The key technology behind the Texas Cloud Self-service Portal
was a Cloud Brokerage and Management platform that allowed for the easy
onboarding and management of cloud computing resources. The platform streamlined the assessment, design, procurement,
provisioning, and real-time governance of solutions across hybrid cloud
environments.
Sequestration is
driving a new sense of urgency towards using cloud computing to save
costs. Fortunately, Government agencies
now have a roadmap and a tool set to enable them to easier onboard to and use
cloud computing using the State of Texas example. Seeing this, Agency CIOs have now recognized
the power of a Cloud Brokerage platform and it is no wonder that every agency
CIO that presented at the DoD and Government Cloud Computing summit this year
stood up and said they would be implementing a Cloud Brokerage platform.
This leads us to believe that 2013 will be the year Cloud
First gets real.
Praveen Asthana is Chief Marketing Officer of Gravitant, a cloud
services brokerage and management company. Prior to joining Gravitant, Praveen
was Vice President of Marketing and Strategy for Dell’s $13B Enterprise
Solutions Division.
( Thank you. If you enjoyed this article, get free updates by email or RSS - © Copyright Kevin L. Jackson 2012)
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