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        2010 a Boom Year for Cloud Computing?
        
        
        
        		There's still a lot of hype surrounding the platform, but if recent  market research is any indication, computing in the clouds could  achieve a breakthrough of sorts in 2010.
Consider a new study from market watcher Aberdeen Group, which  concludes that companies pursuing cloud strategies are able to realize  significant savings, including a near 20 percent reduction in  administrative costs, compared to non-adopters. 
Aberdeen's research  comes with an obvious caveat: It isn't enough to simply develop a cloud computing strategy; successful cloud adopters -- shops  that reap the biggest benefits from their cloud implementations -- must  also develop appropriate support resources, such as a formal cloud computing team or task force, to better manage their cloud investments. 
"Discussions of cloud computing have made their way up to the boardroom just as board-level talk of outsourcing did in the 1980s and the  Internet did in the 1990s," wrote analysts Bill Lesieur and Carol  Baroudi in "Business Adoption of Cloud Computing," a recent  Aberdeen research publication. "Beyond cloud as a transformational  technology, the CFO and board level are looking at the economics of  cloud, specifically converting traditional fixed capital expenditure...spending to variable operating expenditure [or opex] spending."
One salient takeaway, Lesieur and Baroudi concluded, is that successful  cloud adopters continuously monitor their cloud-based assets to measure  both efficiency and use. On top of this, Aberdeen noted,  successful cloud implementations start from the top down (i.e.,  with C-level leadership). They're also ROI-driven -- or, more precisely,  use ROI analysis to drive deployment decisions. 
Cloud applications aren't deployed in a vacuum, either.  Successful cloud adopters take end user satisfaction seriously;  cloud-based apps can't have an impact, much less fulfill ROI  projections, if users aren't consuming them.
There's a kind of stratification between cloud adopters, according  to Aberdeen. Enterprise-class shops tend to pursue cloud computing as a  consequence of existing investments in virtualization and, to a lesser  extent, green IT. In this sense, cloud computing could even be  described as a logical continuation of extant  virtualization or energy-efficiency efforts. 
One upshot of this is that enterprise IT organizations, more so  than IT practices in small- and midsize (SMB) shops, have a  disproportionate interest in private clouds. More than half  (56 percent) of enterprise IT organizations are building their own  private cloud-based infrastructures, according to Aberdeen; less than  one-fifth (20 percent) of SMB shops are doing as much. 
"Having become a mainstream IT infrastructure solution for a number  of years, virtualization has dramatically changed datacenter  operations," Lesieur and Baroudi wrote. "Cloud computing was born  to further abstract the physical hardware infrastructure from the  services and application layer of IT architectures."
SMB customers, on the other hand, typically start with the cloud  platform-as-a-service (PaaS). These shops have either been slower to  pursue in-house virtualization or energy-savings efforts or -- just as  likely -- have fewer legacy resources to bring along for the ride. One  upshot of this is agility. They can more easily transition to a  loosely coupled PaaS cloud architecture. Nearly half (45 percent) of  SMB shops cited plans to outsource some or all of their applications to  PaaS cloud providers. 
Similarly, SMBs are much more likely to outsource infrastructure  resources to PaaS providers, too. According to Aberdeen's survey, 28  percent of SMB shops cited a willingness to do as much compared to just  15 percent of large enterprises. 
"Enterprise companies have more complex IT environments with legacy  applications and infrastructures while SMBs are adopting cloud  applications that do not require legacy planning and transition  strategies," Lesieur and Baroudi wrote.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Stephen Swoyer is a Nashville, TN-based freelance journalist who writes about technology.