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Private Vs. Public - It’s About The Services: Page 2 of 2

  • I’ve experienced a half-day corporatewide email outage based on a single misguided user believing that Bill Gates would pay her $200 for each person she forwarded a chain mail to. She added every email address and alias in the corporate directory to the forward, including conference rooms and scheduled resources. The effort of processing single copy forwarding among the groups, auto replies, and so on brought the system to its knees. The half dozen Reply All corrections/reprimands from others didn’t help. This type of outage shouldn’t happen in a public cloud hosted email system because the huge
    burst in traffic from the affected corporation would be offset by the underlying infrastructure designed to support hundreds of like corporations.

    Many other applications are similarly suited to a public cloud environment. And very few organizations, both government and commercial, are incapable of mixing the two approaches, as long as applications are looked at individually. Some hypothetical examples:

  • A government intelligence agency decides its data is too sensitive for public cloud resources and chooses a private cloud model. These agencies still run public services, websites, and portals that contain non-sensitive data and are accessible in some form to the general public. These services are perfect candidates for public cloud because the cloud frees up internal IT resources to focus on delivery and security of the sensitive services rather than building a series of separate security enclaves internally.
  • A large enterprise analyzes IT costs in a public model vs. private model and determines that at its current IT efficiency, private cloud is more cost effective than a public model. (See the Wikibon post on this.) In this case, the bulk of the IT services will remain in house, but services like email, instant messaging, Web hosting or others may be more cost effective or flexible offsite.
  • A financial institution insists on private cloud for compliance concerns. Compliance covers the personal data of the institutions clients but not all data the institution touches. Services like CRM, email, portions of web hosting, and many others may be excellent candidates for public cloud while maintaining compliance sensitive data in-house.

    Cloud computing offers the ability to enable IT to drive business agility. That ability is amplified if each service is looked at with the following two questions: What is it I am trying to do, and what is the best way to accomplish that?