Showing posts with label Shimmin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shimmin. Show all posts

Thursday, August 06, 2009

BriefingsDirect Analysts Debate the 'Imminent Death' of Enterprise IT as Cloud Models Ascend

Edited transcript of BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights Edition podcast, Vol. 43 on the health of corporate IT and whether reports of its demise are premature.

Download the transcript. Read the summary blog post. Charter Sponsor: Active Endpoints. Also sponsored by TIBCO Software.

Special offer: Download a free, supported 30-day trial of Active Endpoint's ActiveVOS at www.activevos.com/insight.

Dana Gardner: Hello and welcome to the latest BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights Edition, Volume 43. I'm your host and moderator Dana Gardner, principal analyst at Interarbor Solutions.

This periodic discussion and dissection of IT infrastructure-related news and events with a panel of industry analysts and guests comes to you with the help of our charter sponsor, Active Endpoints, maker of the ActiveVOS, visual orchestration system, and through the support of TIBCO Software.

Our topic this week on BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights Edition, and it is the week of June 8, 2009, centers on the pending purported death of corporate IT, and perhaps the unplugging of the last on-premises Web server any day now.

You may recall that in the early 1990s, IT pundits, and my former boss Stewart Alsop, glibly predicted at InfoWorld that the plug would be pulled on the last mainframe in 1996. It didn't happen.

Stewart apologized, sort of, and the mainframe continues to support many significant portions of corporate IT functions. But Stewart's sentiments are newly rekindled and expanded these days through the mounting expectations that cloud computing and software-as-a-service (SaaS) will hasten the death of on-premises enterprise IT.

Some of the analyst reports these days indicate that hundreds of billions of dollars in IT spending will soon pass through the doors of corporate IT and into the arms of various cloud-service providers. We might conclude that IT is indeed about to expire. Not all of us, however, subscribe to this extent in the pace of the demise of on-premises systems, their ongoing upkeep, maintenance, and support.

To help us better understand the actual future role of IT on the actual floors inside of actual companies, we're joined by our guests and analysts this week. First, Jim Kobielus, senior analyst at Forrester Research. Hey Jim.

Jim Kobielus: Hey, Dana. Hey, everybody.

Gardner: Tony Baer, senior analyst at Ovum.

Tony Baer: Hey, Dana. How are you doing?

Gardner: Brad Shimmin, principal analyst at Current Analysis.

Brad Shimmin: Hi, Dana.

Gardner: Ron Schmelzer, senior analyst, ZapThink.

Ron Schmelzer: Hi, guys, just unplugging my mainframe, as we speak.

Gardner: And, for the first time on our show, Sandy Rogers, former program director at IDC, and now independent IT analyst and consultant. Welcome, Sandy.

Sandy Rogers: Thanks, Dana. Great to be here.

Gardner: And, as our guest this week, welcome Alex Neihaus, vice president of marketing at Active Endpoints. Hey, Alex.

Alex Neihaus: Hi, Dana. Hi, everyone.

Gardner: Well, let's start with you, Jim Kobielus, if you don't mind.

Kobielus: I don't mind.

Gardner: We've heard this before, the same story, new trend, new paradigm shift, money to be saved, pull out the plug, you'll get it off the wire, or you'll get it from much lower cost approaches to IT.

I do believe that cloud computing is going to have a pretty significant impact and we've discussed that quite a bit on our show so far. What's your take? Do we have a sense of the mix? Is there any way to predict what's going to happen in, say, five years?

Death notice premature

Kobielus: There are plenty of ways to predict what's going to happen in five years. I need to buy a dartboard. That's one of the ways. I can predict right now, based on my conversations with Forrester customers, and specifically my career in data warehousing and business intelligence (BI). This notion of the death of IT is way too premature, along the lines of the famous Mark Twain quote.

If you look at a vast majority of enterprise data warehousing in BI environment, there is a bit of a movement toward outsourcing of the date warehouse into the cloud. There is a bit of a movement toward moving more of the report and dashboard and analytic application development to the end user or to the power user or subject matter expert and away from the priesthood of mathematicians, statisticians, professional data modelers, and data-mining specialists that many large companies have.

There is a bit of a movement in both directions. But it's only movement. In other words, there aren't a substantial number of enterprises that have outsourced their data warehouse or their marts. Probably there aren't that many commercial options yet that are fit to do so. Only a handful of data warehousing vendors offer a hosted solution, a SaaS, or cloud solution. I've been telling people that 2009 is not the year of the cloud in data warehousing, nor is 2010. I think 2011 will see a substantial number of data warehouses deployed into the cloud.

Gardner: Well, Jim, will that be taking them off of the corporate network and putting them in the cloud or will they just be new ones on the cloud?

Kobielus: The component of your data-warehousing environment that will be outsourced to public cloud, initially, in many cases, will not be your whole data warehouse. Rather it will be a staging layer, where you're staging a lot of data that's structured and unstructured and that you're pulling from both internal systems, blogs, RSS feeds, and the whole social networking world -- clickstream data and the like.

They will be brought into cloud storage services that will operate as a staging layer

First is security. You need strong control and you need to also be able to monitor it 24/7, because it's the most fundamental thing that you run your business on.

where transforms, cleansing, match and merge, and all those functions will be performed on massive amounts of data. We're talking about petabytes where it makes more sense, from a dollars-and-cents standpoint to use a subscription service in a multi-tenant environment.

Gardner: We're still going to see data growing on-premises as well.

Kobielus: Yeah, we're definitely going to see data growing a lot on-premises. The core data-warehousing hub where your master data is stored -- for most companies of most sizes -- will remain on-premises for lots of reasons. First is security. You need strong control and you need to also be able to monitor it 24/7, because it's the most fundamental thing that you run your business on.

There are lots of reasons why the centerpiece of your data-warehousing environment, the master tables, were made on-premises. For the foreseeable future, I sense strong reluctance from corporate IT to outsource that. As to the whole front-end mash-up side of these all sort of developments, I'm doing a report that will be published in about a month on the uptake of that approach. But, that's several years down the road, before we see that come to fruition. So, I don't think IT is dying anytime soon.

Gardner: Tony Baer, what about applications?

Cloud is transformational

Baer: Well, I just completed actually a similar study in application lifecycle management (ALM), and I did find that that cloud certainly is transforming the market. It's still at the very early stages, but it's not going to be basically a one single, monolithic, silver-bullet approach. And, not all pieces in the app lifecycle are as well suited for the cloud as others.

I found that two areas really stuck out. One is anything collaborative in nature, where you need to communicate -- especially as development teams go more global and more distributed, and of course, as the pace of business changes the business climate and accelerates -- it's more important than ever to get everybody on the same page, almost literally. So, what I found was that planning, budgeting, asset management, project portfolio management, and all those collaborative functions did very well.

At the other end of the scale, another side that did very well was something that I think Jim was sort of hinting at, which is anything that had very dynamic resource needs,

When you're developing code, you don't want to have to deal with any type of network latencies that are going to come up when you deal with cloud.

where today you need a lot of resource, tomorrow you don't. A good example of that is testing -- if you are a corporate IT department, which has periodic releases, where you have peaks and valleys in terms of when you need to test and do regression test.

Gardner: Platform as a service (PaaS)?

Baer: Yeah. What I found though that did not map well to the cloud was anything that related to source code. There were a number of reasons for that. One is, basically, that developers like to have the stuff on their own local machines.

There is a degree of control that you like, but there are some tactical reasons. When you're developing code, you don't want to have to deal with any type of network latencies that are going to come up when you deal with cloud. No matter how good the bandwidth, there are always going to be times when there are going to be some speed bumps.

But, the other part was also related to IP, which is source code before it's compiled in the binaries. It's basically pretty naked and it's pretty ripe for stealing. This is your intellectual property. Today, if you're doing development, it's because there aren't packages that are available to supply a generic need. It's something that's a process that's unique to your organization.

So, I got a lot of reluctance out there to do anything regarding coding in the cloud. There is the Bespin project on Mozilla, but that's the exception to the rule. So, in terms of IT being dead, well, at least with regard to cloud and on-premise, that's hardly the case in ALM.

Gardner: Brad Shimmin, why do we see these reports, some of them coming out of Wall Street? They're supposed to be smart money saying $120 billion of IT is going to be in the cloud in the matter of two or three years. Is it that they don't understand what cloud is, or are they dead wrong?

Shimmin: I don't think they're dead wrong. As Tony was saying, it depends on what you're putting in the cloud. Because I follow the collaboration area, I see that happening much, much more quickly, and, frankly, much sooner than even the discussion we've been having recently about cloud computing.

Way back in the late 90s, and early "0-dots," Microsoft and IBM were making big money out of their managed hosting services for Exchange and Notes, and they are pushing that downstream a little bit more now to get to the channel and the long tail.

Gardner: So there is not a lot of intellectual property in a messaging transfer agent?

Bothersome IT functions

Shimmin: That's just it. Those are the functions that IT would love to get rid of. It's like a diseased appendix. I would just love to get rid of having to manage Exchange servers. Any of us who have touched any of those beasts can attest to that.

So, even though I'm a recovering cynic and I kind of bounce between "the cloud is just all hype" and "yes, the cloud is going to be our savior," for some things like collaboration, where it already had a lot of acceptance, it's going to drive a lot of costs. If that's what Wall Street is talking about, then, yeah, I think they're pretty much accurate.

Gardner: Ron Schmelzer, we certainly heard a lot about cost reduction. It's certainly top of mind in a recession. I also think that cloud computing can offer some significant cost savings, but to what degree are we talking about disrupting the status quo in most IT departments?

Schmelzer: It's really interesting. If you look at when most of the major IT shifts happen, it's almost always during period of economic recession. The last time was in 2000-2001, when we first started really talking about service-oriented architecture (SOA). In the mid- '90s was when we really started pushing out the Web. In the early part of the '80s, when recession was kind of bad, that's when personal computers started coming about.

You kind of go back into this package every time. Companies are like, "I hate the systems I have. I'm trying to deal with inefficiency. There must be something wrong we're doing. Let's find some other way to do it." Then, we go ahead and find some new way to do it. Of course, it doesn't really solve all of our problems. We spend the next couple of years trying to make it work, and then we find something new.

The cost-saving benefit of cloud is clearly there. That's part of the reason there is so much attention on it. People don't want to be investing their own money in their own infrastructure. They want to be leveraging economies of scale, and one of the great things that clouds do is provide that economy of scale.

From my perspective on the whole question of IT, the investments, and what's going to happen with corporate enterprise IT, I think we're going to see much bigger changes on the organizational side than the technological side. It’s hard for companies to get rid of stuff they have invested billions of dollars in.

Gardner: Wait a minute. So, this is like a neutron bomb. The people die, but the machines keep running?

Schmelzer: Actually vice versa. The machines might change and the machines might move, but IT organizations will become a lot smaller. I don't really believe in 4,000-person IT organization, whose primary job is to keep the machines running. That's very industrial revolution, isn't it?

Gardner: Sandy Rogers, the theory is good, the vision is good, but so was the theory in 1995 that you'd pull out the last mainframe in a year. What's your perspective, given that you've been tracking enterprise infrastructure software for quite some time?

The cost of change

Rogers: Well, it's interesting. Many organizations have avoided legacy modernization projects due to the cost of change. It's not just about the technology replacement. It's a loss of capabilities. It's the change in human workflow and knowledge base. All that is a critical consideration. I see enterprises all the time that are caught between a rock and a hard place, where they have specialized technologies that were built out in the client-server era. They haven't been able to find any replacements.

So the idea of software-as-a-service (SaaS), that one-to-many model, means the kinds of replacements that are available will be very generic in nature, for the most part. There will be some niche capabilities, moving way out in the time horizon. But, the ability to take a legacy system that may be very specialized, far reaching, have a lot of integrations and dependencies with two other systems is a very difficult change. A company has to get to a very specific point within their business to take on that level of risk from change.

Gardner: It's one thing to change from a legacy system to a more modern standard-based hardware and operating system platform environment and to frameworks

It's not to say it won't be done, but it certainly has a big learning curve that the whole industry will be engaging in.

for development. That's not quite the same, though, as making a transition to cloud. Do you think they go hand-in-hand?

Rogers: One thing to think about is there are so many different layers of the stack that we're talking about. When we're talking about cloud and SaaS, it's going to impact different layers. So, there may be some changes in the types of deployments that go on, the target locations.

It reminds me of the film, Pretty Woman. That's "just geography," and that's the way I envision the first wave moving out. We may want to think about leveraging other systems and infrastructure, more of the server, more of the data center layer, but there is going to be a huge number of implications as you move up the stack, especially in the middle-ware and integration space, and pick and choose different applications and their capabilities.

There are a lot of systems out there that are not designed to be run in this kind of capacity. We're still at the very beginning stages of leveraging services and SOA, when you look at the mass market. What I've been discovering in speaking with enterprises that are either doing SaaS as a business or as an enterprise is that the first thing they're thinking about is that the architecture has to able to support this kind of dynamic access and the ability to scale.

So, there's a lot of work that needs to be done to just think about turning something off, turning something on, and thinking that you are going to be able to rely on it the same way that you've relied on the systems that have been developed internally. It's not to say it won't be done, but it certainly has a big learning curve that the whole industry will be engaging in.

Gardner: Not about just pulling a plug at all.

Rogers: Yeah.

Gardner: Alex Neihaus, you're someone who's actually in the software business -- unlike the rest of us. And, by the way, thanks very much for sponsoring the show. We really appreciate it.

Neihaus: Our pleasure,

Gardner: Tell me a little bit about your perspective as someone who is delivering software, productivity, and value to enterprises. Why not go up on someone else's cloud and deliver this strictly as a service?

Borg-like question

Neihaus: We think that this is a Borg-like question -- who assimilates whom? Ron was exactly correct that cloud and the associated technologies that we describe today is today's shining new toy. What we find more interesting is not the question of whether the cloud will subsume IT or IT will subsume the cloud, but who should be creating applications?

And, there is a meta question, or an even larger question, today of whether or not end users can use these technologies to completely go around IT and create their own applications themselves? For us, that seems to be the ultimate disingenuousness, the ultimate inability for all the reasons that everyone discussed. I mean, no one wants to manage an Exchange server, and I was glad to hear Brad include Notes Server in that list, but, in fact, IT is still doing it.

So for us, the question really is whether the combination of these technologies can be made to foster a new level of collaboration in enterprises where, frankly, IT isn't going to go away. The most rapid adoption of these technologies, we think, is in improving the way IT responds in new ways, and in more clever ways, with lot more end-user input, into creating and deploying applications.

You hear a lot of people talk about the generational shift in business people. I agree that there is a lot more familiarity with IT among business end users, but we don't

For us, the cosmic question is whether we are really at the point where end users can take elements that exist in the cloud and their own data centers and create processes and applications that run their business themselves.

hear from our customers that business end users even want to be in the business of creating or manipulating applications in IT, in the cloud, or anywhere else.

Gardner: What I hear you saying is that you see the IT department as your customer, but also, at some level, the end user is your customer. You need to make them both happy, but can you make that end user happy without the IT department?

Neihaus: Our answer is no, simply because of some of the things that Sandy was talking about. There are legacy systems -- there are plenty of things lying about, would be the right way to put it -- that need to be integrated, using technologies that are modern and appropriate.

For us, the cosmic question is whether we are really at the point where end users can take elements that exist in the cloud and their own data centers and create processes and applications that run their business themselves. And our response is that that's probably not the case, and it's probably not going to be the case anytime soon. If, in fact, it were the case, it would still be the wrong thing to do in enterprises, because I am not sure many CEOs want their business end users being IT.

Gardner: Now, your product is something that's designed to make crafting and managing business processes easier and more visual. You're trying to elevate this from a code-based or tool-based process to more of a visual, something that an analyst level person could do, but not necessarily a line-of-business person. So, you've already tested the waters here and your conclusion is that IT can't go away.

Model-based environment

Neihaus: Correct. We're a model-based execution environment, and you're exactly right that we try and expose those processes to the business. But, there are what I call "pretty pictures" kinds of approaches to this, and they can exist in the cloud and they can exist in IT. But, for most people, those are customizations of existing applications.

You might go buy a call-center application and allow end users to modify the workflow. But, once you get beyond the pure human workflow, and you begin to integrate the kinds of systems that Sandy was talking about, and I think Ron was talking about, you're beyond the skill, desire, or capability of an end user.

Now, can these things be composed from elements that exist in the cloud? They could be and they probably should be. But, whether the cloud represents something that can enable business users to eliminate IT is a huge stretch for us, based on what we experience in the marketplace.

Gardner: We haven't really explored that dimension where the cloud fits. Does the cloud get between the end user and IT, or is the cloud behind IT and IT gets between the cloud and the corporate user and perhaps even their customers out in the public domain?

Brad Shimmin, recently we saw some inkling about Google Wave. What that's going to represent? I found the demo and the implications very interesting.

We've all been end users at some point and still are in many ways, for what we do day-in and day-out. I think all of us here will attest to the fact that we can be incredibly stupid.

Google seems to think that they can go directly to the end user, at least for some elements of collaboration for bringing different assets together in a common view -- maybe some check-in, check-out benefits, using a spectrum of different communication modalities and synchronicities.

What's your take? Is Alex right that we're not going to get too much out to the end user directly, that IT is going to be part of that? Or, are we perhaps being a little bit too cautious about what end users are capable of?

Shimmin: We've all been end users at some point and still are in many ways, for what we do day-in and day-out. I think all of us here will attest to the fact that we can be incredibly stupid. Yesterday, when I was sitting on Microsoft's Virtual Analyst Summit, I heard them say that what they'd like to accomplish is for users to be able to open up an Excel spreadsheet and create a BI report that would normally take IT two weeks to do.

I thought, "Hey, that's terrific, but, oh dear Lord, you don't want anyone to do that, because they're going to use the wrong datasets, they're going to perhaps have the wrong transitions and transformations for data."

It's not as simple as the picture is being painted. With Goggle Wave, as we've said before, when they are talking about certain types of collaborative applications, that sort of mashability -- as Jim put it earlier -- is something users are capable of and comfortable with. It's within the bounds of something they know how to manage, and they know that what they get out of the application is right.

When I hear about customers being able to mash-up their own BI reports, for example, I think, "How would they know? How on earth would they know that what they've gotten out of it is correct?"

Gardner: And, would the security and regulatory compliance issues be maintained?

Loss of control

Shimmin: Sure, that's the other horn on the bull. The more you move into the cloud, the less control you have over the data. The vendors that I talk to realize that fact, but they still haven't come to a point in which you can control which data resides where and what happens to that data. This is even in the collaboration space, mind you, which is I've said is really getting out there ahead of a lot other ventures,

A lot of companies that say they are pure SaaS are really still using shared data resources on the back-end, which is not a good thing, if you really need to lock down that data.

Gardner: It's not really cloud. Is it?

Shimmin: No.

Gardner: Jim Kobielus, I'm sorry I cut you off earlier, but I wanted to get across the spectrum of our analysts, before we dug down too deeply. But, now is the time to dig deeply to this point that end users, even sophisticated power users in a corporate environment, are probably not going to be in a position of doing SQL queries or even queries that have been visually abstracted for them. We need a sort of intermediary group or capability between the consumers of data and the actual production of data. Isn't that right?

Kobielus: The intermediary group is the governance group. Alex, Brad, Sandy, and the others are talking about how, as you allow the end users or encourage them or require them to mash up the hone applications in their own data, in their own presentation layer, that becomes chaos unless you have strong governance.

As Brad said, when users are given a sandbox of their own, they should know that the whole sandbox, in fact, was built and is being monitored by IT, so that you're taking the right data, doing the right transforms, and applying the right presentation components, the right data model, the right calculation, as defined by your company, its policies, and its rules. You need strong governance to keep this massive cloud sandbox from just becoming absolute chaos.

So, it's the IT group, of course, doing what they do best, or what they prefer to be doing, which is architecture, planning, best practices, templates, governance control, oversight support, and the whole nine yards to make sure that, as you deal in new platforms for process and data, such as the cloud, those platforms are wrapped with strong governance.

Gardner: Tony Baer, perhaps what we are seeing is not the demise of IT, but the transformation and elevation in the role and importance of IT.

The other part is technical. If you're going to provide them the capabilities to mash up things, which is certainly valuable, you want to do this in a protected sandbox

Instead of doing support, maintenance, patches, and keeping the red lights out and the green lights on, they're going to be involved with the governance, provisioning, security, and more innovation in terms of getting closer to the productivity benefit than simply keeping the cycles going and the hard-drive spinning.

Baer: There's no question about that. It reminds me of some of the notion that to make things simple underneath the plumbing is very complex, so make things simple on top. As Jim is saying, you can't provide users the ability to mash-up assets and start creating reports without putting some sort of boundary around it.

This is process-related, which is basically instituting strong governance and having policies that say, "Okay, you can use these types of assets or data under these scenarios, and these roles can access this and share this."

The other part is technical. If you're going to provide them the capabilities to mash up things, which is certainly valuable, you want to do this in a protected sandbox. That's where I see technical innovations that could go to cloud, which would be like enterprise mash-up hubs -- probably a good example -- or like a report center.

I could use those Excel spreadsheets to generate those reports, but they're coming from a protected set of data for which there are very stringent access controls and governance. So, it's a combination of both process and technology.

The same cloud?

Gardner: Ron Schmelzer, I'm a neat person. I like things that follow in nice little neat packages that line up, and are not crooked. What I am starting to see now in this cloud evolution is one part of a cloud being something that end users would use, inside of companies or consumers at home through their mobile devices.

I'm also seeing the cloud providing these back-end infrastructure services, automation and lower cost, and building blocks for IT. And, IT has a value-added role on top of that. But, is it the same cloud? Is it a different cloud, and how would we manage this border between, "I want to use the cloud as an end user" and "I want to use the service from the cloud through the IT department control."

Schmelzer: It sounds like you have a future in interior decoration to put things in neat boxes, but that's why we call it a cloud, right? The reason we call these things cloud is because they're kind of amorphous. They don't have well-defined boundaries.

The whole reason for the metaphor "cloud" is that in network diagrams you want to show something outside the boundaries of the IT organization, but you don't know exactly how it's configured. You just represent it visually as a cloud, right? So, that's the conceptual model we are computing here, where you don't necessarily have all the details of the implementation.

Now, the question is: is the cloud boundary at the firewall or is the cloud boundary necessarily outside of the organization? Not necessarily. There maybe internal processes in IT or the IT organization that are leveraging aspects and elements that you don't have complete control over, in which case they are very cloud-like. They have all the same features and benefits of the cloud.

What we have to be aware is that there are a lot of different things that are wrapped up in the cloud. There's SaaS and application service provider stuff that we've been doing since late '90s. There's utility computing, grid computing, elastic computing, compute on demand, and all this sort of stuff.

The question is what benefits do we want? That's what differentiates cloud.

There's an increasing need to compose and integrate silos within organizations. That has a huge implication on governance activities.

It really is a third-party provider that we're paying for on a transactional model and leveraging infrastructure we have no visibility over, rather than a model that we have ownership of. We have cost visibility, but we have elastic consumption capability. So, we're using more of the implementations of the cloud.

Gardner: Sandy Rogers, you've been tracking governance capabilities, and is it the role of IT to further govern this amorphous boundary between what a cloud, off-the-wire set of services might bring to an organization in addition to governing the IT that goes on inside of their SOA activity. Is IT going to rise up to this or you are going to say, hey, that's outside of our purview and we are not interested.

Rogers: It's certainly within the purview of both IT and business, as partners, to address governance, whether it's internal to an organization or it's leveraging facilities that are external or outside the firewall. IT is still responsible for ensuring that whatever systems are used, how and where the technologies and being used, they accomplish the business goals.

It's off-loaded for support overall. They're going to have to be responsible to ensure that it fits in line with their governance policies in their meeting to set goal. I think the availability and maturity of technologies will evolve, and it will evolve in different spaces to be one-for-one able to be replaced.

The sophistication of the solution interfaces and the management in the administrative capabilities to enable governance, are very nascent in the cloud offerings. That's an opportunity for vendors to approach this. There's an increasing need to compose and integrate silos within organizations. That has a huge implication on governance activities.

Gardner: And, that doesn't even include these outside silos.

Step back and do the basics

Rogers: Yes. It's just being exaggerated with these cloud-based environments. What I've seen in looking at SOA governance is that for those companies that don't have good governance policies, programs, and procedures to start with really are in a situation where they have to step back and do the basics. Every time you end up with some type of distributed, federated environment, you have to look at all of those issues that relate to governance, whether it's compliance, security, management, or anything like that.

SOA, or any distributed environment, exaggerates this. Cloud will exaggerate it even further. Managing contracts and legal arrangements will be a growing emphasis within IT. What's interesting in the cloud space is that we're seeing a lot of packaged services, where one company may be engaging with a service provider, and that service provider is dependent on another service provider for, say, providing some compute infrastructure services.

Gardner: An ecology approach to this.

Rogers: Yes, having the visibility, having access to the right information to perform governance is going to be an area that needs to be worked on. It will have to be worked on sooner, rather than later, to win over those C-level executives who are very nervous about relinquishing control.

Gardner: Another area that I'd like to get into, before we run out of time, is the ability for the vendors, the software providers, to make a decent living. If they're only going to deliver what they do through a cloud model and they have a subscription they are going to charge per user per month, or some similar model, can they, in fact, cover their cost and make a profit?

JP Morgenthal, who has been on our show, has been critical and says that even open source is a threat, because of the same issue. The innovative, quality software won't get developed in the future, if the models don't support it. I'll take that to Alex as a software developer and provider of value. Is there a case here that the subscription model undercuts the viability of your business?

Neihaus: I don't think so, and I'll tell you why. Like any other vendor of any product in any marketplace, we'll sell our services or our products the way customers want to buy them.

The software market is very big. The market we exist in, the business-process management system marketplace, is very big. Companies like ours and others will adapt to what customers ask for

As of yet, at least in our case, we've had no substantive demand for subscription, which is closely associated with the open-source model. It turned out to be fairly expensive over a longer period of time, or per user per month hosted Exchange or Notes mailbox pricing. -- at least for the category in which we exist.

The software market is very big. The market we exist in, the business-process management system marketplace, is very big. Companies like ours and others will adapt to what customers ask for. We can be more nimble than some of the bigger players in this marketplace to responding to that, and that's the key point.

The very large, leviathan players in the space have the most to lose from any kind of change in pricing or distribution business models. So, there's a huge lethargy in the marketplace towards changing buying behavior.

Even if we wanted to promulgate and distribute a new business model, customers are so used to buying the way they have been buying from companies for such a long time that their internal processes from decision-making to contracting are wrapped around those models. It's something we would adapt to, but I think the market is going to change relatively slowly.

Gardner: Brad Shimmin, to Alex's point that the big players, the leviathans, have the most to lose from the wholesale move to cloud, that's in semi-agreement with this concept that moving to a services provisioning subscription model has its risks compared to a license on-premises, per processor type of model. Where do you come down on that?

Vendors will adapt

Shimmin: Well, I stand firmly on the side of broader ecosystems and the power to the people. So, my feeling is that the vendors will adapt to this, just as Alex was saying, but they're doing it slowly. When I look at Microsoft, Cisco, and IBM, for example, I see three very different approaches to that.

With Microsoft, they were pretty quick to roll out their Microsoft online services and firmly undercut the pricing that their partners could give their customers on hosted Exchange, for example. But, they set it up so that those partners could then build value-add on top of it to increase their revenues. As we've been talking about here, when it comes down to just a numbers game, it's hard to make money on just a pure services contract -- unless you have a huge scale to work with.

When Microsoft rolled out Azure -- last October, I think it was -- the plan was to allow their ecosystem, their channel partners, to build applications for vertical markets. These are the things they are good at and the things that Microsoft is not good, and they can make money on those by building into the cloud.

It's these channel partners that are going to benefit the most from these standardized interfaces and the mashability component that's built into these cloud services. It's not the end users who are going to be putting things together. It's the channel partners who are going to be assembling value that they can then deliver to customers.

Gardner: Tony Baer, it seems to me that the open source rollouts of the past 10 years may be harbingers of things to come into cloud.

A lot of customers have said, "Look, just handle the infrastructure for an extra fee, and we'll to continue to pay our perpetual license."

If a large vendor wants things to go slowly, they could perhaps time things. At the same time, they might offer certain elements of their services as a service for free in order to undercut competitors and/or to entice the use of a larger solution, rather than an application or feature set. Do you expect they will see that?

Baer: To a certain extent, where you will see it is in the commodity areas. Microsoft is obviously the poster child there, because they have the most to gain and the most to lose. Actually, it's more that they have the most to lose, not so much to gain. They are really in a defensive position there.

But, when you look at enterprise software or more specialized software, I don't think that's really the case. One of the notes I was jotting down here was that I thought this may actually be very particular to my market, to the software tools market, and that it may march to a different drummer, compared to customer relationship management (CRM) or Exchange.

IBM is struggling with the pricing for how it's going to price its cloud. Hewlett-Packard's (HP's) experience so far, at least from the Mercury side which has offered testing services going back a long ways, is that in many cases, the pricing is not on the subscription model. A lot of customers have said, "Look, just handle the infrastructure for an extra fee, and we'll to continue to pay our perpetual license."

The move to the cloud and subscription pricing are two different things. One does not necessarily follow the other. That's a finding that actually surprised me.

Gardner: Ron Schmelzer, Tony Baer made a point that you could be a victim of cloud, before you could be a beneficiary of it, if you are a provider and a vendor. That's a tough transition to go through.

All transitions are similar

Schmelzer: Maybe, and I think all these transitions are like that. If you look at what happened to the Web. I was on the CRM side of things back in the mid '90s, and we thought that the Web was going to kill client-server CRM applications, and, to a certain extent, it kind of did. It just took a lot longer than we thought. I remember Siebel's dominance and they're saying, "We are not going to move to the Web."

Obviously, Salesforce put the impetus behind it, but even before Salesforce was out there in the late '90s, we were asking, "Why are we using this in-house enterprise application software system with all this great Web stuff happening over there? Why can't we put this stuff online?" The same thing is going here.

We talked about this a couple of podcasts ago, this IT divide between the IT experience at work and the IT experience at home. The home IT experience is just so much richer than what we've got at work. So, it's the same question. Why are we still using these systems in the enterprise and we have all this cloud-based mash-up stuff when we go home?

The writing is on the wall. The smart vendors will learn how to transition themselves in a way that doesn't cannibalize their existing business model. The stupid ones will be pushed to the model anyways, They can't resist it, and they will, of course, suffer.

Gardner: I think this has been a very good and interesting discussion. I'd like to go around the table before we close out, because I haven't heard too much about the death of IT in these permutations of the subject that we've gone through here.

Jim Kobielus, first to you. On a scale of 1 to 10, with 1 being IT dead and 10 being

Much of the actual guts of IT within an organization will migrate to hosted environments, and much of the development will be done by end users and power users.

IT alive, robust, and growing vibrantly, where do you think we're going to see the IT department's role in say three years?

Kobielus: Okay, in three years. I'll be really wishy-washy and give it a 5. It's almost like Schrodinger's cat. You know it's in the box, but you don't know if it's dead or alive yet. It depends on how the quark falls. But, I think that in three years time, IT will be alive, kicking, robust, and migrating toward more of a pure planning, architecture, and best practices function.

Much of the actual guts of IT within an organization will migrate to hosted environments, and much of the development will be done by end users and power users. I think that's writing on the wall.

Gardner: So, the role and impact of IT will be about the same in three years?

Kobielus: Yeah.

Gardner: Tony Baer, how do you come down -- 1 to 10?

Baer: I was really confused about Jim's answer, because I thought he said at one point that IT's role is going to change as we go to hosted services.

Gardner: We may change his mind on the show.

Doing the cool stuff

Kobielus: Actually, 20 years ago I worked as a contractor for a government agency that outsourced a vast majority of their IT to contractors. I remember that the folks who remained as the government's employees running the shop were all procurement, planning, architecture, and all the high-level, cool stuff. They didn't get their fingernails dirty.

Baer: I don't subscribe to the death of IT, because I remember 20 years ago hearing about the death of IT, when Yankee Group did the announcement of that Kodak did a big outsourcing contract, because they decided that, as a company, they were not really in the business of IT. They were in business of photography. A few years later, they realized that the business of photography really did involve IT, and they very quietly backtracked on those contracts.

Gardner: JP Morgan Chase did the same thing about five or six years ago, right?

Baer: Exactly. As Sandy was saying before, there is a lot of complexity, even if you outsource. Outsource means that you need more management. Even if you use the cloud, that requires more governance.

So, I don't see IT's role diminishing. There may be a lower headcount, but that can just as much be attributed to a new technology that provides certain capabilities to end users and also using some external services. But, that's independent of whether there's a role for IT, and I think it pretty much still has a role.

Gardner: If you have 1 to 10, give me a number.

Baer: And 10 being that it does have a role?

Gardner: Vibrant, alive, thriving, and growing like crazy.

Baer: I am going to give it an 8.

Gardner: Excellent. Brad Shimmin?

Shimmin: I'm giving it a 7 for similar reasons, I think that it's going to scale back in size little bit, but it's not going to diminish in value.

IT is not going to go away. I don't think IT is going to be suffering. IT is just a continuously changing thing.

Back to what Sandy was saying, I think it's going to be very much alive, but the value is going to be more of a managerial role working with partners. Also, the role is changing to be more of business analysts, if you will, working with their end users too. Those end users are both customers and developers, in some ways, rather than these guys just running around, rebooting Exchange servers to keep the green lights blinking.

Gardner: So, more architects, fewer admins.

Shimmin: Yup.

Gardner: Ron Schmelzer?

Schmelzer: I'm going to be your lemming here. I think it's 10. IT is not going to go away. I don't think IT is going to be suffering. IT is just a continuously changing thing. Look, IT is only 60 years old. The whole life of the entire IT-as-an-organization department within the enterprise is only 60 years.

So, IT is going to be thriving in three years. It's going to be completely different than anything we may know today or maybe it'll be mostly similar. But, I guarantee that whatever it looks like, it will be still as important as an IT organization.

Now, of course, my information tells me that the world is coming to an end at three years, my Mayan Calendar. That was a good choice on time horizon, because if you had said four years, that would mean the world is not going to exist in four years. So what kind of trick question is that?

Gardner: Well, that's why I bring it down. Sandy Rogers -- 1 to 10?

Some IT is in deep trouble

Rogers: Probably in the 7 to 8 range. I agree with everything that's been said here. I think it's up to the individual enterprises. In some enterprises, IT is in deep trouble if they do not embrace new technologies and new opportunities and become an adviser to the business. So it comes down to the transition of IT in understanding all the tools and capabilities that they have at their disposal to get accomplished what they need to.

Some enterprises will be in rough shape. The biggest changeover is the vendor community. They are in the midst of changing over from being technology purveyors to solution and service purveyors. That's where the big shift is going to happen in three years.

Gardner: Alex Neihaus, how about your choice here? 1 to 10?

Neihaus: Our self-interest is in a thriving a segment of IT, because that's who we serve. So, I rate it as a 10 for all of the reasons that the much-more-distinguished-than-I panel has articulated. I wish to say one thing, though. The role of IT is always changing and impacted by the technologies around it, but I don't think that that could be used as an argument that it's going to diminish its importance or its capabilities really inside organizations.

Gardner: Well, I'll go last and I'll of course cheat, because I'm going to break it into two questions. I think their importance will be as high or higher, so 8 to 10, but their budget, the percent of spend that they're able to derive from the total revenues of the organization, will be going down. The pressure will be on, and it will be going down.

So, from a price and monetary budgeting perspective, the role of IT will probably be down around 4. That's my take.

Thanks very much for all of your input. I also want to thank the sponsors for the BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights podcast series, Active Endpoints and TIBCO Software.

And I also want to thank our guests this week. Jim Kobielus, senior analyst at Forrester Research. Thanks Jim.

Kobielus: Always a pleasure.

Gardner: Tony Baer, senior analyst at Ovum.

Baer: Great discussion as usual.

Gardner: Brad Shimmin, principal analyst at Current Analysis.

Shimmin: Thank you, Dana. It was great today.

Gardner: Ron Schmelzer? What's your name again? Brawn? No, Ron Schmelzer, senior analyst at ZapThink.

Schmelzer: Glad to be here, and I think my mainframe is taking about three years to turn off. I'll let you know in three years.

Gardner: Thank you also Sandy Rogers, now an independent IT analyst and consultant.

Rogers: It was great to participate and be here.

Gardner: And also a special thanks to Alex Neihaus, vice president of marketing at Active Endpoints.

Neihaus: It was a thrill to join you guys today.

Gardner: Thanks for listening to BriefingsDirect. Come back next time.

Download the transcript. Read the summary blog post. Charter Sponsor: Active Endpoints. Also sponsored by TIBCO Software.

Special offer: Download a free, supported 30-day trial of Active Endpoint's ActiveVOS at www.activevos.com/insight.

Edited transcript of BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights Edition podcast, Vol. 42 on on the health of corporate IT and whether reports of its demise are premature. Copyright Interarbor Solutions, LLC, 2005-2009. All rights reserved.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

BriefingsDirect Analysts Take Pulse of New Era in IT: Flat Line Stasis or Next Renaissance?

Edited transcript of BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights Edition podcast, Vol. 41 on the current state of information technology and defining the best description of the next era of computing.

Listen to the podcast. Download the podcast. Find it on iTunes/iPod and Podcast.com. Charter Sponsor: Active Endpoints. Also sponsored by TIBCO Software.

Special offer: Download a free, supported 30-day trial of Active Endpoint's ActiveVOS at www.activevos.com/insight.

Dana Gardner: Hello, and welcome to the latest BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights Edition, Volume 41. I'm your host and moderator, Dana Gardner, principal analyst at Interarbor Solutions.

This periodic discussion and dissection of IT infrastructure related news and events, with a panel of industry analysts and guests, comes to you with the help of our charter sponsor, Active Endpoints, maker of the ActiveVOS visual orchestration system, and also through the support of TIBCO Software.

Our topic this week on BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights Edition, and it is the week of April 27, 2009, centers on the next era of information technology (IT). We seem to be in it but we don't have a name for it yet.

Suddenly, cloud computing is the dominant buzzword of the day, but the current confluence of trends includes much more. There is business process modeling (BPM), business intelligence (BI), complex event processing (CEP), service-oriented architecture (SOA), software as a service (SaaS), Web-oriented architecture (WOA), and even Enterprise 2.0.

How do all of these relate? Or if they don't relate, is there a common theme? Is there an overriding über direction for IT that we need to consider?

For me, the cloud computing moniker just doesn't include enough and doesn't bring us to the next stage. In the words of Huey Lewis, we need a "new drug." So what is the next über IT phase for next generation enterprise technology?

Here to help us understand what the new IT drug is, join me in welcoming our analysts panel this week. We are joined by Jim Kobielus, senior analyst at Forrester Research. Hey, Jim?

Jim Kobielus: Hey, Dana. Hi, everybody.

Gardner: Brad Shimmin, senior analyst, Current Analysis.

Brad Shimmin: Greetings, Dana.

Gardner: Joe McKendrick, independent analyst and prolific blogger. Welcome back, Joe.

Joe McKendrick: Hi, Dana, glad to be back.

Gardner: We also welcome Ron Schmelzer, senior analyst at ZapThink. Hey, Ron.

Ron Schmelzer: Hey, there. Glad to be here. Thanks for having me on your drug trip.

Gardner: And we also might be joined in a little while by Tony Baer, senior analyst at Ovum.

But let's start out with our über definition. Jim Kobielus, do you agree with me that we're oversimplifying what's going on in IT by just calling everything that's going on cloud computing?

Kobielus: Of course, we're oversimplifying, but that's what we, as analysts, need to do now and then. There is just too much stuff, too much complexity, too many themes, and too many paths for evolution and innovation.

I agree with you, Dana, we all get worn out by these themes, trying to jam too much into them. Half the time I'm thinking we need to move to a post-theme era in IT and have a themeless architecture.

Half the time, with all these themes, I feel like I'm in Disneyland. I'm walking in Adventureland, Tomorrowland, Fantasyland, and, after a while, I sort of lose sight of the overall big park through which I'm roaming. I want an über Walt Disney to stand above it and say, "Here is my vision for the great magical journey we're on."

I don't think that Great Uncle Walt will emerge from the sky, but I do think we need to ask ourselves what value these themes add. These are all valuable frameworks -- SOA, cloud, virtualization, Enterprise 2.0, SaaS, and so forth, but they're valid and valuable for particular uses and for particular ways of approaching and managing the technology. None of them is superfluous, but none of them will become the über theme for everything we might ever want to do with technology.

Gardner: Well, Brad Shimmin, it seems though that something has shifted in the last six months. Perhaps, it's because of the recession, the contracting economy, but it certainly feels different than it did six months ago. Do you agree?

Shimmin: It does. Even in the last few weeks, now that we have the Swine Flu economy upon us. It seems that so many of us are in the midst of knee-jerk reactions to things within the industry and within our little sphere that we live on, but something more profound has changed over the last couple of years.

Going back to what Jim was talking about, it's so hard to put a finger on it and describe it. It's almost like the art scene at the turn of the century. They really didn't know what the hell to call what people were making. So, they just said, "Oh, it's postmodern." So, the postmodern IT world is perhaps what we're living in. Maybe that's okay, where there is no really overriding sort of thematic vision to IT, but I'm an analyst so I always try to like put labels on things.

My attempt with this is to describe just the zeitgeist I've seen over the last year or so, and that is just to call things -- with a double entendre totally intended here, and it's not sexual by the way or drug related -- "transparent computing." That's is what I'd look at this as.

The double part of this is IT resources and business solutions are becoming more visible to us. We're able to better measure them. We're able to better assess their cost-to-value ratio. At the same time, the physicality of those resources and the things that we call a business are becoming much more transparent to us and much more ethereal, in terms of being sucked into Amazon EC2, for example.

Gardner: What's transparent now that wasn't before?

APIs and transparency

Shimmin: For one, application programming interfaces (APIs) have made things much more transparent than they were. We all had a great discussion a little while back about WOA. That's a great example of what that means. As an enterprise owner or an independent software vendor (ISV) creating software, you have the ability to see into software with much more active and quicker response time than you could back in the days of SQL or an API in a 400-page book that you had to memorize.

Gardner: Is that a function of open source or just that Web services need to be fully understood in order to be shared and have interoperability work?

Shimmin: Open source to me is really the cultural vision of what you're talking about. Technologically, it really was what SOA engendered in its approach with opening up a layer of abstraction. So, it's like open-source sociology, SOA technology.

Gardner: What do you think, Joe McKendrick, is it the "open the kimono" technology era?

McKendrick: I think so. I don't think there's a name we can give it. Perhaps computing has become so ubiquitous to our everyday lives and our everyday work that it no longer needs to carry a name. We don't call this era the "telephone era" or the "television era." For that matter, we don't call it the "space age" anymore. The novelty and the newness of all this is worn off.

Looking back over at the past six months or even five or six years, a big thing that's been happening is that business users really understand computing. Computing is such an everyday thing that folks understand. At the same time, the IT folks are beginning to understand the business a little bit better and we're seeing those two worlds being brought together and blending.

Gardner: This is a George Costanza moment: worlds are colliding.

McKendrick: Worlds are colliding.

Kobielus: Dana, I just noticed something. This decade that we're currently ending has no name. Last decade it was the '90s, the one before that was the '80s, we've never given this decade a real name that's stuck chronologically. Likewise, this era that we are now entering doesn't have a name and maybe it shouldn't have a name, it's the "double-0 era."

Gardner: You're right, we don't have a name. Ron Schmelzer, do you think we need a name for this? It seems that now we're talking about a post-IT era, because IT is so pervasive that we don't even need to break it out anymore, that its just part of everything?

Schmelzer: We could say that we're still floating through the information era, but I like what Jim was talking about, the floating from one theme park to the other theme park in Disneyland, as we've been doing here in IT, to a certain extent.

I'm going to bring back the drug theme here. I might as well. We like to self-medicate in IT. We have these chronic problems that we seem to be continuously trying to solve. They're the same problems: getting systems to talk to each other, to extract information, and to make it all work. We try one drug after the other and they provide these short-term fixes. Then, there's the inevitable crash afterward, and we just never seem to solve the underlying problem.

If we had to get back to that Disney theme, there actually was one that tied them all together. What was the theme at Disneyland? "It's a small world after all." Isn't it? I like to bring it all back to IT. All these things we do, they're all looking very similar. Tying in the recent presidential campaign, maybe we are the change we are looking for. So maybe it's not really about the technology. Maybe it's the way that we're sitting here using the stuff, and it's more a change to process than it is to technology.

Kobielus: And, taking that theme just a little further, it's amazing what you can do with a mouse.

Psychological shift

Gardner: Well, in an era when we're always on, where there is ubiquity of at least network reach, now we all have smartphones and we can sync the phone to our PCs and into the cloud. We're all carrying our same configuration, private and public, as well as personal and work, all around with us. We never seem to break free of our IT identities. Our IT identity, our personal identity, and our work identity are the same.

Is this really a psychological shift then? Do we need to stop thinking about how technology is shifting and think about how people are shifting? I think that people are acting differently than they used to.

Schmelzer: I found out one thing though. From our personal life, our IT experience is becoming very rich. It's not just the Web and the phone experience or the television experience. Everything, the whole IT experience, is becoming remarkable. But, there is a digital divide, and I'm not talking about the parts of the country that have more IT than the other. I'm talking about the experience at home and the experience at work.

When I step into work, I'm turning the clock back 10 years. I have this wonderful, rich IT environment on my own at home and on my phone. Then, I see these enterprise IT systems that had very little in the way of influence from any of these movements from the last 10 years. It's like the enterprise IT environment is starting to stagnate quite a bit from the personal IT environment.

McKendrick: You aren't talking about the ZapThink workplace, are you?

Schmelzer: I work at home, so I've got the best of both worlds,

But, there is a digital divide, and I'm not talking about the parts of the country that have more IT than the other. I'm talking about the experience at home and the experience at work.


but I'm talking about walking into some of customer environments.

McKendrick: Some companies have stepped back 20-30 years in time.

Gardner: Hold on that thought. Ron, it sounds to me like a generation gap. We're back to 1972. Our dads are still locked into the World War II generation, and we're already well into the "Me Generation." Is that what's going on in technology now between business and consumer technologies?

Schmelzer: Yeah. Look at the IT environment. The question is, if we had to do it all over again, would we really be building enterprise IT systems or would we be doing it the way Google is doing it? Google would just be laughing at us and saying, "What are you doing putting in these mainframes and these large enterprise applications that take X millions of dollars and multiple years and you only achieve 10 percent of your goals and only use 5 percent of the system you just built? That's just hilarious."

Gardner: Jim Kobielus, is this whole cloud thing, in fact, forcing businesses and enterprise to catch up with what's been going on in the consumer circles?

Kobielus: Is the cloud phenomenon causing businesses to catch up with what's going on the consumer circles? Can you give me an example, Dana, so I know where you're coming from with that one?

Gardner: It's sort of playing off of what Ron was talking about. If I go to Gmail, I can get a free account. Suddenly, I can do chat and coordinate with my mobile phone. Google knows my identity a little bit and offers me the ability to do word processing, and on top of that I can do better searches. Then, in addition to that, I've got my own profile now at the bottom, when people search on my name. Now, I have an AdWords account. I can coordinate and integrate into cloud, but I can't in my own business.

Highly empowered

Kobielus: Exactly. Most of us, as Ron indicated, in our personal lives are highly empowered now with all sorts of media, gadgets, and services that it's just amazing what we have already integrated into our "life" lives.

When we go out to the workplace, assuming that we work somewhere other than our home and we're not self-employed, we see what our employer provides for us. What the employer provides may be technology, services, or capabilities that are 10 years behind the times.

We get frustrated. We think, first of all, "I'm spending eight or more hours of my day here with less capability, less connectivity, and less ability to be productive than if I simply stayed at home. Well, why don't I simply telecommute? More to the point, why don't I move to another company that provides me with better tools that are up-to-date, up to 2009?"

What you're hitting on is that there is this disconnect between what we can get on our own for ourselves and what our employer provisions for us. That causes frustration. That causes us to want to bolt, defect from an employer who doesn't empower us up to the level that we absolutely demand and expect.

Who has the highest expectations? It's the younger generation. It's my kids' generation, who are in college. When they go out to the working world,

What you're hitting on is that there is this disconnect between what we can get on our own for ourselves and what our employer provisions for us. That causes frustration.

they're going to think, "Oh, look at this. I'm not going to work for these people whose heads are stuck in the '70s or '80s."

Gardner: I don't know about the young people thing. I think the gap isn't really based on age. I think it's a gap based on people who see IT as empowering versus those that see IT as debilitating.

I was at the ballet last night in Boston, and during intermission, between some great dancing, people were breaking out their smartphones, and these weren't young people. Here's a whole group of folks that you really wouldn't have expected to be doing that. Brad Shimmin, what's going on?

Shimmin: I've got a great example of that from a vendor. I don't think I can name them, because they haven't made it live yet, but this is representative of what I'm seeing in my area of research, which is in collaboration, social computing, that stuff.

Most of the vendors have got the traditional, on-premise software, and they're all putting it in the cloud. They're also saying to me, in their go-to market schemes, "We're trying to take IT out of the picture, at least at the outset." They're seeing IT as a roadblock to getting these technologies -- like the ones you're talking about with Google Apps -- into the enterprise.

The people in the enterprise realize they want it. The worker bees in IT realize it, but IT's hands are strapped. They can't do anything about it, like Jim said. So, these companies are literally working around IT in some ways to bring these technologies into the enterprise.

Half empty - half full

Gardner: I'd like to get more into this psychology of what makes people rabid IT consumers versus somebody who avoids it. I think it has to do with the glass being either half empty or half full. Some people see IT as actually benefiting them across the board -- personal lives, communications, applications and services.

You go into a lot of cities now and there are people driving Zipcars, ordering groceries over the Internet, and finding their directions on their iPhones or a smartphone. It's really embedded deeply into their lives. There are other people who just don't see IT as helping them, but it actually frustrates or inhibits them.

Does anybody else have some thoughts as to whether we're crossing a cultural gap here or a threshold? Should we call it the "age of always on or always off," and how do we decide who gets to do what?

McKendrick: Dana, even those folks who think they're avoiding IT, actually do deal with it. Anytime they go to an ATM, they're using the client, the front-end of a network of an IT system. If they go to a phone and use voicemail or a voice prompt, they're accessing an IT system. It's unavoidable now.

I'm going to bring up Google up here. Even 10 or 20 years ago in any science fiction movie, nobody could have imagined that we'd have a resource where we could ask any question and get an answer back from any point in the globe. Nobody ever thought that, that would be possible.

Gardner: It really strikes me that between Wikipedia and Google, I can find just about anything I want, and I do. It's very enriching.

McKendrick: Anything, all the information in the world, everything is

Even 10 or 20 years ago in any science fiction movie, nobody could have imagined that we'd have a resource where we could ask any question and get an answer back from any point in the globe. Nobody ever thought that, that would be possible.

available.

Shimmin: Excuse me guys. With Wolfram Alpha, if any of you have heard of that, that's coming out, it's going to be not just content, but also the data itself. You can get answers to questions like, "What's the statistical probability that I'm going to get in a car accident next year?" It's amazing. For me, it's not so much even a cultural shift or a threshold. It's a functional threshold.

Back to just talking about Google and how pervasive it is, and the ATM example. If you're a two-year old baby and you're picking up an iPhone -- which I think I saw on YouTube at some point -- and you're able to actually make the damn thing work, that says to me that we've crossed the functional threshold. We have the technology in a form factor that people can understand and make use of, without it being a barrier to their adoption, regardless of age or any of those other factors.

Schmelzer: This wonderful idea of technology and technologists and IT and stuff -- we've been trying to figure out what is the real issue with business and IT. Is it just that there are people who don't like technology and people who do? It's more than just a cultural thing? It's personal preference. What we found is that most people, if not almost everybody, actually loved technology. So it's not an anti-technology thing.

You ask people, "Well, do you want a 42-inch plasma television in your house? Do you want TiVo? Do you want the latest MacBook and the latest iPhone?" Something like 90 percent of the people are going to say yes. They want the GPS. They want all that stuff.

So what is it about enterprise IT? It's not the technology that they're blocking. It's this complexity. And it's not just the complexity. It's this perception that enterprise IT is nonconstructive hassle. So they look at Google and they think, "Ah, constructive, productive." They look at enterprise IT, and they think, "Barrier, bottleneck."

Shimmin: You're absolutely right. Any of us here -- because most of us work remotely -- who has to get on a VPN before we're allowed access into the corporate facilities that we connect with knows that hassle and knows just what you're talking about.

Resisting bottlenecks

Kobielus: We on this call are atypical, because we're highly autonomous analysts who are quite used to self-provisioning. We're either running our own business or, if we 're employed by a larger company, have a remote, completely self-contained office where we basically have to do everything.

We're chief cook and bottle washer and we fix our own systems issues. We resist these IT bottlenecks, because bottlenecks just keep us from continuing to self-service and self-provision, as we've always preferred to do and as we want to keep on doing.

Really, this is an age of self-service, mashups, fending for ourselves, and resisting bottlenecks, or organizations, such as corporate IT, that essentially are bottlenecks, keeping us from getting the resources and services that we need right now.

Gardner: We're also in the era of mass bankruptcies, with Chrysler now declaring bankruptcy. We're looking at large banks, some of which may have not passed the stress test. We're looking at, in some senses, an implosion of a financial order, at least on Wall Street.

Is there any connection? Is there any connection between a big car company that can't seem to change itself over a 30-year period and individuals, enabled with technology

We have a corporation gap. The corporations have a huge burden of trying to move and do anything, whereas individuals or small companies or people that are aligned by their social network can move swiftly.

as it is today, can change their career, change their direction, and get virtually any information instantly.

Is there something going on here between the fact that a big company can't shift and move and change, but individuals can? Any comments?

McKendrick: A few months ago, when it first became apparent that GM and Chrysler were on the skids, Andrew McAfee of Harvard posted this proposal to help these companies. If he were given the option to rebuild one of these companies from the ground-up, he would go in with a very strong social networking system, enabling the folks that are working on the front lines, assembly, production, sales, marketing, and so forth to communicate with each other real time, on a regular basis, to find out what everybody is doing, and to build the base of knowledge to move the company forward.

Gardner: So, we don't have a generation gap. We have a corporation gap. The corporations have a huge burden of trying to move and do anything, whereas individuals or small companies or people that are aligned by their social networks can move swiftly. Perhaps we need to destroy the dinosaurs and become small furry mammals in the undergrowth. Is that it?

Kobielus: Yeah, take the auto analogy. I'm from Detroit originally and I know that culture. Auto companies of necessity are chained to platforms. It's the basic chassis and design and the internal guts in terms of the transmission and engines and so forth for a wide range of models. When they make a commitment to a given platform, they're stuck with it. They put up millions upon millions of dollars.

Gardner: Well, the same can be said for your enterprise IT department, right?

Chained to a platform

Kobielus: Exactly. Being chained to a fixed and fairly static platform, there are great scale economies. That's how the GMs got to be GMs, but it really limits your ability to turn on a dime. In other words, when some hotshot auto company from -- let's just name a country we don't even think has an auto industry -- Zimbabwe comes along and gives the customer something that they like more, they just build fairly quickly and get out to market.

I don't know of any Zimbabwean automaker, but regardless, if you think about corporate IT, they're chained to these huge platforms that they've made a significant investment in. So, when some cheaper, more lightweight solution, maybe in the cloud, comes along, the users can get it quickly and more cheaply. It's essentially mocking the investments that this company has made. You spent millions of dollars on something that you could have gotten in the cloud for pennies per hour. That's a disruptive force in IT.

Gardner: Let's hold that thought. I think Tony Baer just joined us. Is that right?

Tony Baer: Yeah, I'm here.

Gardner: Welcome to the show, Tony. We've been talking about needing a new drug in IT. I think we've stumbled into something interesting. Individuals in their lives, corporations, governments, maybe even entire industries, some of which are encumbered by technology or held back if it's a "platform-based technology," can't move with the times.

Other organizations, individuals, or networks of people embracing what we now are calling loosely "cloud computing" are able to be fleet agile, move on a dime, change their business, and not be encumbered by their own data centers or their own platforms. There seems to be a gulf between the two.

One group is able to be productive and perhaps redefine business and even culture and society relationships. The other is suffering terribly with massive layoffs, restructuring, mergers and acquisitions, in a sense a meltdown, even bankruptcies at a scale never expected.

How do you see it, Tony? Is the gap here between technologies? Is it between platforms? How can we reconcile these two?

Baer: Well, there are a couple of things. There is always the advantage of the late starter, and there is always a disadvantage of the first starter. One of the things that came to my mind this week is the imminent demise of Cassatt, which was onto the idea of private clouds before its time.

On the other hand, if you're a late starter and the technology or the market has already proven itself, you can then start to innovate with the latest methodologies or technologies, whatever, without being burdened by all the baggage.

Gardner: Are we talking about more than just the innovator's dilemma here? Aren't we really moving into a new era, because everyone is always an innovator, if you look at the cloud model?

In a new era

Baer: Right. I'm coming a little bit out of context here, but I do think that we're into a new era, where you need to shave your cost structure and all your baggage that keeps you stuck in one place.

On the other hand, what I was about to lead up to is that you can start nice and fast, but then as you start to get into the scale up and scale out, in other words, when you start to become a victim of your own success, there are some lessons that some veterans have learned. Veterans who haven't been bogged down by legacy infrastructure learn that if you've just come into this race, you might think this doesn't apply to you, but it does.

So, on one hand, yes, I do think we are at a point where there are some basic structural changes that are happening, but at the same time, the old rule still applies. Once you get to a certain scale, you need to know how to manage it, whether it be technology, people, communications, process, or whatever.

Gardner: Brad Shimmin, let's take this back to the IT department and the large enterprise. They might be seeing this going on. They might have an inkling. But, they know that they can't do much with their existing culture and their existing organization. Isn't it time for a skunkworks or some sort of a parallel IT department, even if it's not sanctioned? It's going to happen whether you want it to or not, and isn't it time to start looking at that as perhaps the future?

Shimmin: That's already happened, Dana. Otherwise, how can you explain the preponderance of SharePoint servers running around? That stuff is not being bought top-down.

As I was saying a little bit ago with some of the vendors I'm talking to, trying to go around IT, they're realizing that this culture exists within the enterprise of wanting

I do think we are at a point where there are some basic structural changes that are happening, but at the same time, the old rule still applies.

to make use of the self-starting tool that Jim talked about. So that age is already upon us.

IT's challenge is to be able to allow those to happen and to encourage them to happen without locking them down, controlling them, and destroying their ability to make people in the enterprise more productive and flexible. As we've been talking about here, it's really a two-fold thing we're after in this age that we're talking about.

One is, the lightweightness of the infrastructure, getting rid of the Ford iron underneath the car. The second is to make the people on the line more valuable to us. It's no longer the Nubians pulling stones up to make the pyramids, it's the, Nubians are the stones and the pyramids for our companies. We are the companies.

The people in them are the ones that drive their potentiality. As an IT person, working in IT, you really have to sort of say, "I know that I have people that have the ability to do start their own software. And, I know that top-down I'm really not getting any support for this. So, I've got to find a way to stay relevant to those people, make their lives easier, and allow them to adopt the software and to make a go.

How that happens, I really couldn't tell you. It depends on how the software that the folks are using is built.

Gardner: Ron Schmelzer, is it fair to say that a company that can't transform its IT is doomed to fail?

Dooming the company

Schmelzer: We're not taking from any recent book titles, are we now? Service-oriented IT technology is a core to every company. So, not managing information, which is one of the four primary resources of the company, is effectively dooming the company to fail.

Bringing it back to the automotive and banking industry companies, clearly what brought the automotive companies to the current state is the fact that they just weren't selling a lot of cars. And, the fact that they weren't selling a lot of cars has to do with the economic situations -- if people can't borrow money, they can't buy cars -- and also, they weren't producing cars people wanted. So the question is, how would IT have helped there?

Maybe it was understanding better how to process the information that they had at their fingertips. Maybe some better intelligence on how to spot trends ahead of time might have allowed them a year ago to start paring back production and anticipation of the flattening demand or something like that. But, that's not information technology, that's just information.

Sometimes, we, as technologists, tend to put too much emphasis on the second half of that word information technology and say, "Well, information technology is about the technology."

Gardner: It's also how people use the information, right?

Schmelzer: I would argue that it has very little to do with the technology. Information technology has almost entirely to do with information. If all we're doing

Banks had sophisticated analytics to look at the risk, at what they were doing with the mortgages, the subprime, and so forth. But, human factors overrode that technology and those capabilities.

is putting more barriers between the business and the information by throwing technology, we're really making the problem worse.

Gardner: Joe McKendrick, what do you think? How do we emphasize process and people, but, at the same time, recognize that the business and the technology are maybe necessary cinder blocks on the feet? How do we get these all to move together in a fleet way or do we wait for the bad ones to go out of business?

McKendrick: Wow! Do I have to answer that?

Gardner: Yeah.

McKendrick: Okay.

Gardner: Well, I have another question for you if you don't want that one.

McKendrick: No, no, I'll take that one. Ron, you just hit the nail right on the head. If we look back at the chain of events that led to the financial meltdown, the problems of the auto industry, the turbulence in the global market that caused the oil prices to go up, it stems back to the real-estate crunch and the mortgage crisis, the tools were there.

Banks had sophisticated analytics to look at the risk, at what they were doing with the mortgages, the subprime, and so forth. But, human factors overrode that technology and those capabilities. I'm going to say it was greed, simple greed.

The market was booming and everybody wanted to pile on, despite what the risk management systems might have been telling them. Therefore, you have a case where the technology is there, the information technology. As Ron was saying, the emphasis on technology is there. We have great tools, but there is the human factor and those business cycles.

Gardner: Clearly, the technology needs to be there, but perhaps doesn't need to be visible. The transparent notion that Brad has makes sense, or maybe we need to be the "post-IT era." The IT has to be there, but under the covers, convenience and information become essential, along with the ability of people to act on it.

New tools and information

McKendrick: There's a lot of talk about this being Great Depression 2.0. Fortunately, that talk subsided, but we have a lot of tools and information. We were able to sidestep a major disaster, such as we saw on the 1930s, because we had more information. We're able to act on the information. We have the technology.

Gardner: I think that's true.

Schmelzer: It's very interesting. Tony, maybe you could piggyback off of this. You live in an art capital there -- New York. After the Realism movement in art, we got to the phases of the Modernism movement. We moved from over-complexity to over-simplicity. It's quite possible that we might be doing that here in IT. Our next big movement in IT might be to shed all this complexity and perhaps oversimplify for the sake of trying to solve some of the problems of our over-complex Baroque history here.

Baer: I'm almost tempted to say that we're going to go into a postmodernist era. Joe was talking just now talking about how we used information fairly effectively to, at least for now, forestall a Depression 2.0, but it also brings me back to one of the things that Dana mentioned in the invites to this podcast, talking about some of the technologies that were out there -- and one of them being CEP.

Who were the folks who were using it all these years? It was a lot of the financial services, the Wall Street houses, all the folks who were doing derivatives. Did that prevent a crash, when essentially human behavior, human greed, let us down? We had all this technology to analyze all these risks, but we didn't use common-sense risk management.

Gardner: That's right. They had their emphasis on the complex events, but they couldn't step back and see the less complex events, which is, "You've got too much leverage, pal."

Baer: Exactly, exactly. In that sense, we became a slave to the technology we had.

Kobielus: Yeah, that defines the era. I'm glad you brought CEP back into this. The era that we're living in now is an era of wild volatility. Everything is crashing around us. It feels like it. If it isn't crashing around us, we hype it in our own culture.

This morning I twittered on the Swine Flu so-called pandemic. When did they stop being epidemics and become pandemics? And, when does a disease that's only killed a little over 100 people suddenly become equivalent to an outbreak 90 years ago that killed, was it [50 to 100] million people worldwide?

Shimmin: More than World War I [with 15 million killed].

Kobielus: The financial industry has for a long time been used to volatility. That's what they're about. That's the stock market. It's a volatile bouncing of prices, trades, and whatever. That sector has been built on volatility and on

What we live in right now is an era where everything conspires to give you a massive headache, a massive migraine all the time.

volume -- just increasing volumes of transactions, data, and a broader variety of transactions. It's The Big Vs: Volatility, Velocity, and Variety of events, flowing in to the financial institutions, all the time, continuously.

In many ways that volatility now affects every aspect of our lives, likewise the sheer volume of stuff we all have to deal with in our personal and professional capacities, and the sheer variety of stuff too. What we live in right now is an era where everything conspires to give you a massive headache, a massive migraine all the time, because of the 3 Vs coming together.

Gardner: We should call it "the complex generation."

Kobielus: Call it "the migraine era."

Gardner: Let's come up with some other names for what we're trying to describe here. We've really done a nice job at defining what it is, but, just because we're analysts, we need to put some labels on this stuff.

Jim has got complex and migraine era. Brad Shimmin, any ideas? You said "transparency." That works, but I think it takes an explanation in addition to the word "transparent" in order for people to understand. Is there a word that we can come up with that people instantly get?

Flat-earth IT

Shimmin: Wow, small task. I guess I would say that everything we're talking about is horizontal economy, horizontal IT. IT is no longer tipped on its side, with everything falling off the slope. It's distributed out amongst the constituency that make up the business, which is both IT and the users, and the flat Earth sort of thing, which, I guess, is another popular book that's out right now. So, I guess I'd call it the "flat Earth IT era."

Gardner: Okay. Joe McKendrick, any buzzwords or über terms? What are we doing? What's going on around us?

McKendrick: A few years back, an author said the corporations are breaking down -- I think I talked about this on this podcast -- into confederations of entrepreneurs. The company of the future will be a confederation of entrepreneurs.

I'd like to call it "entrepreneurship," "Entrepreneur 2.0." How's that? IT is breaking down these large structures, these large institutions, into bite size pieces. Technology is making information accessible to all, for all to leverage. As I say with SOA, we're becoming both consumers and producers of services.

Gardner: The power of one.

McKendrick: The power of one. I like that.

Gardner: Ron Schmelzer, any ideas on the terms here?.

Schmelzer: I think we're moving in the right direction. I don't know if I'd use the term "entrepreneurial," but it sounds to me more like a populist movement. Really what we're doing is empowering individuals within the organization to have greater control over their use and provisioning of IT capabilities.

They're shifting it away from these central oligarchies of enterprise systems that have had way too much control and way too little flexibility,

IT is breaking down these large structures, these large institutions, into bite size pieces. Technology is making information accessible to all, for all to leverage.

that have not prevented any of the major economic problems we've had, and to some extent maybe even contributed by shifting our focus away from the information and too much toward the technology.

I like these populist movements in IT. Once again, just remember your IT experience at home and how much you would wish it would be in your work environment.

Gardner: So, perhaps technology, habits, and the cloud are shifting sovereignty away from countries, companies, and even groups based on geography, like villages or towns or cities, being sovereign. Having power is now shifting down to amorphous groups and even individuals.

Shimmin: It's a meritocracy, Dana. That's exactly what we're talking about.

Confederated self-determination

Kobielus: This reminds me of a project I was involved with in, of all places, the auto industry several years ago. I was writing with a guy who was a real futurist. He was talking about future virtual product coalitions. The idea is that there are too many plants located in the wrong places. We have different skill sets and different centers of demand and they need to be rationalized with it. You need to provide the flexibility, the information, and the resources in order to act, as well as the ability to enter into trading partnerships.

This employs the principles of loosely coupled. I'd look at this as confederated local self-determination.

Gardner: Individualism. They theorized about individualism back in the late 1800s -- guys like Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and some of the other philosophers. They were called "existentialist," after a while, but they were basically focused on saying, "You are a universe of one."

Kobielus: But we're in a world where we work with other people and other entities. In other words, you don't make your own car. You don't grow your own food. You depend on other sources for that -- for sustenance. So, yes, we have more self-determination, but yes, but we are also confederated because we rely on other services, other people, and other entities.

Gardner: We only rely on other entities that are on the network though.

Kobielus: Yeah, we are interdependent.

Schmelzer: It's the information economy that we're talking about here specifically. The other thing that's pushing us here is that if you've been observing the trends in the IT industry moving toward massive consolidation, while there's always going to be new venture creation, that's just part of the engine that is

In order to get reuse, which is what people talk about all the time, you have to have legacy. Just think, if you're never keeping anything around long enough, you're never going to get reuse.

venture capital and the capital system. The bulk of IT spending is becoming increasingly concentrated with a smaller and smaller set of companies.

So, from an enterprise IT experience, we're starting to drive the wedge between buying technology from an increasingly shorter list of vendors who are becoming über suppliers. This set of freely available technology just doesn't compete with that enterprise consolidation purchasing cycle. As this consolidation happens, it's going to exercise even more of the ability to say, "If we're not going to go the route of 'pick your handful of vendors here.' then you can go this plethora of other technologies that are really up to you as the individual to choose." That's what's happening in this economy.

Gardner: It's interesting. Just as we're embracing cloud, we're also seeing that, if you have a couple of mainframes, you can create a cloud. You could provide services out to a public constituency, or you could take your old mainframe inside the enterprise and put some new hubcaps on it. Then, you're able to do all sorts of application hosting and co-location services and act like an IT shared-services organization. So, it's back to the future in terms of both the ends and the means, right?

Schmelzer: Actually, both of those visions are not inconsistent with each other. That's the irony of it. In order to get reuse, which is what people talk about all the time, you have to have legacy. Just think, if you're never keeping anything around long enough, you're never going to get reuse.

The irony of it is that you have to have legacy to have reuse. But, having legacy doesn't necessarily mean also not spending a lot on new things, which is the weirdness of it. Why is it that we're soaking up so much of the IT budget on legacy, if we're not creating anything new?

There's something malfunctional in the way that we're procuring IT that's preventing us from getting the primary benefit of legacy, which is extracting additional value from an existing investment, so that we can make the old dog get new tricks and get new capabilities provisioned on a cloud, without having to invest a huge amount in infrastructure.

The biggest behavior that has to change is IT procurement. It has to fundamentally change, move away from these multi-million dollar software-provisioning cycles, and really think much more about the existing IT environment and enabling the populist economy.

Gardner: Brad Shimmin, is it possible that the cloud makes a lot of sense and even the mainframe and centralized models make a lot of sense, but client-server and distributed computing got in the middle to become the complexity roadblock?

What really matters

Shimmin: Certainly it is, but let's just go back to what we were talking about. To me, whether it's mainframe or a bunch of PCs on Google's data center doesn't matter. What matters is what it does. If we're able to make our existing mainframes do new tricks, that's really great, because it allows us to make use of investments we've already made.

That's why, when I look at things like SaaS, I see it being more beneficial to the vendors who are providing those services than to the customers using them. Instead of having something they can depreciate over time, they just have to pay it out every month like a telephone bill. You don't ever own your services -- you're just paying for them, like leasing a car versus owning a car.

Kobielus: I have a new theme. It's not the "migraine era," but rather it's the "era of seamless scavenging." All this legacy, all this functionality, on-demand access through clouds, mashups, and so forth, means each of us can immediately self-provision by scavenging all the rich functionality, all the data that's out there to be gotten in this environment for seamless scavenging.

Shimmin: Dana, back to your question to me, that's exactly what client-server does. I don't see it as a roadblock. I saw it as basically breaking down those assumptions of what the system should do. PCs had to do this. The mainframe had to

So, yes, cloud is a way of papering over all the administrative overhead. On the other hand, this isn't going to be your grandfather's timesharing mainframe.

do that. And, client-server came along and said, "Screw that. You can create your own multi-tiered environments that do different things. You can put application resources, not just in one box, but across a number of boxes."

Gardner: So that was a necessary threshold to cross?

Shimmin: Yeah.

Gardner: Okay. Tony Baer, do you think cloud computing is a response to the limitations of distributed computing?

Baer: There's no question about that, and I want to respond to what Brad was saying before about client-server being a distraction. I think it was a necessary stage to go through to get to where we are right now, to understand what we could really get out of a cloud without this being a repeat of time-sharing.

So, yes, cloud is a way of papering over all the administrative overhead. On the other hand, this isn't going to be your grandfather's time-sharing mainframe.

Gardner: We need the best of centralization, the best of distributed, but not being tied to distributed or client-server. We also need to have the ability for people to act on almost anything they can acquire very cheaply and easily through the Internet.

Baer: Client-server gave us the idea of that this is no longer a one-way conversation, from a host to a dumb slave. I want to have some capability locally.

Gardner: So, empowering was a necessary cultural shift, if not the right technological shift?

Best of both worlds

Baer: Exactly. Theoretically, if the cloud is done right, and if we use all the right enabling underlying architectures and technologies, we should theoretically be able to get the best of both worlds. I say "theoretically," because, of course, no shift to any type of architecture or technology ever goes without its own baggage.

When we thought that outsourcing was the way of dealing with staff complexities several years ago, what we realized was, if you outsource, you have to add an administrative layer. If you're going to acquire cloud or acquire cloud services, you are going to need to manage something new that you didn't have to manage before.

Gardner: I think I've come up with a word for us. If we look at what happened perhaps 500 or 600 years ago, there was a collective word that came to represent it. It was called Renaissance.

Are we perhaps at a point where there is a Renaissance in IT? Even though we thought we were enabled or empowered, we really weren't. Even though we thought that centralized and lock-down was best, it wasn't necessarily. But it wasn't until you got the best of all worlds that you were able to create an IT-enabled renaissance, which of course cut across culture and language, individuals, even the self-perception of individuals and collectively. Does anybody like the idea of "renaissance" IT or computing?

Baer: Just as long as we don't have to go through the Black Plague before it.

Gardner: All right, does that make Steve Jobs Michelangelo, what's going on?

If you're going to acquire cloud or acquire cloud services, you are going to need to manage something new that you didn't have to manage before.



Schmelzer: Well, I'm sure he is painting on the Sistine Chapel. We're definitely moving into some new arena. That's not to say that it's a generational thing, but it is true that young generation, and I'm on the cusp here myself, has been raised with information technology. A lot of the perceptions of information technology actually are different, just in general.

For example, 20 years ago, when we first put cameras up in the streets, the biggest concern was privacy, especially in the UK. People said, "Oh, they've got cameras everywhere. It's going to intrude into my privacy." Twenty years later, what do we do? We take pictures of ourselves and we post them on Facebook. So what just happened there?

In one instance, we were concerned about the cameras intruding our privacy. The next thing, we are the greatest cause of our privacy concerns, and nobody cares. What's happening in IT is that we're hung up, to a certain extent, generationally on what we expect the IT department to do and how it works, the whole budgeting process, the IT payment process, and all sorts of stuff.

But, we're raising a generation of people who can go online and within five minutes create a highly interactive website, with video, chat, forums, post documents, and do all the sort of stuff that would have taken probably a team of 20 with a few million dollars and many months to do, probably in a less efficient way. So how is this going to work?

Gardner: That was only five years ago.

Do it yourself

Schmelzer: Right. So how is it going to look when these guys go into the work stream and you tell them that some portal project is going to take six months? It's just laughable. They'll just say, "Forget it. I'm just going to go online to Google and do it myself."

Shimmin: They'll say, "There an app for that."

Gardner: Right. And, that's why it could be a new renaissance of productivity, bottoms-up, grassroots. Eventually, the big institutions of the old order will either adjust or completely crumble.

Schmelzer: Even more, I think we're looking at a renaissance of the organization of IT, of the IT department, if you will. The IT department could potentially become endangered itself, not the organization as a whole. Businesses operate on economic terms, not necessarily on technology terms.

If the IT department continues to increase the digital divide between the home IT experience and the work IT experience, then these people are going to go to work, they're going to watch the thing done, and when the IT department says no, then they're just going to do it themselves.

Gardner: And whoever does it faster, better, cheaper ends up having quite an advantage in the marketplace.

Schmelzer: So, the IT department really is at a risk at this point.

Gardner: Okay, we have to leave it there, I'm afraid. We're out of time. But, we've had an interesting discussion that has led us to perhaps the concept of a new renaissance and how IT is going to adjust, exploit, or perhaps even diminish in its role as a result.

I want to thank our panelists. We've been talking with Jim Kobielus, senior analyst at Forrester Research. Thanks Jim.

Kobielus: Yeah, always a pleasure.

Gardner: Brad Shimmin, senior analyst, Current Analysis. Thank you, Brad.

Shimmin: Thank you, Dana.

Gardner: Joe McKendrick, independent analyst and prolific blogger on software and enterprise subjects. Thank you, Joe.

McKendrick: Thanks, Dana. It was fun.

Gardner: Ron Schmelzer, senior analyst at ZapThink. Thank you, Ron.

Schmelzer: It was a pleasure being on this drug trip with you.

Gardner: And Tony Baer, senior analyst at Ovum. Thank you, Tony.

Baer: Better late than never.

Gardner: I would also like to thank our sponsors for contributing to the underwriting in support of the show. That would be Active Endpoints and TIBCO Software.

This is Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions. You've have been listening to BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights Edition. Thanks for listening and come back next time.

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Edited transcript of BriefingsDirect Analyst Insights Edition podcast, Vol. 41 on the current state of information technology and defining the best description of the next era of computing. Copyright Interarbor Solutions, LLC, 2005-2009. All rights reserved.