Thursday, August 22, 2013

Combining Big Data and Cloud Capabilities for ECommerce Matches Buyers and Sellers Like Never Before

Transcript of a BriefingsDirect on how a mid-market company saw immediate results from participation in Ariba Discovery, eliminating the need for mailing half a million catalogs a year.

Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes. Download the transcript. Sponsor: Ariba, an SAP company.

Dana Gardner: Hi, this is Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions, and you're listening to BriefingsDirect. Today, we present a sponsored podcast discussion on ways that businesses are using cloud and e-commerce to improve how they do sales, marketing, and online transactions.

Gardner
We'll examine how one company, Ohio-based LLT Barcode & Label, has found powerful new ways to develop sales and leads using Ariba Discovery.

To learn more about how social tools and business networks are reshaping eCommerce and how companies like LLT Barcode & Label is using the cloud to better connect with new customers, please join me in welcoming our guests today.

We're here with Rachel Spasser, Senior Vice President of Marketing at Ariba, an SAP Company, and Kris Hart, the Account Manager at LLT Barcode & Label in Stow, Ohio. Welcome, Rachel and Kris. [Disclosure: Ariba is a sponsor of BriefingsDirect podcasts.]

Kris Hart: Hi. How are you doing today, Dana?

Rachel Spasser: Thanks, Dana. Glad to be here.

Gardner: Rachel, this whole concept of finding customers, developing leads using cloud, using the networked economy and how people are linked up now more-and-more has become a function of the data that people are able to access.

Tell me a little bit about how things have changed, say now, versus five years ago, in terms of just connectedness, and how this is now being brought to bear on an age-old problem, which is finding sellers for buyers, and buyers for sellers?

Spasser: We're talking about major changes that have gone on in the past few years. If you think about the mantra around marketing, it's always been to make yourself, your product, and your company relevant to potential buyers.

Spasser
Ten or 15 years ago, as the Internet was really coming into its own, it provided significantly more data that helped us understand demographically, and a little bit behaviorally, who our customers were and what they were doing.

When we talk about the networked economy, business networks, and connected commerce we're really taking that to a whole other level, where as marketers, we're able to hyper-target, our potential customers not just on their demographics, but also be able to predict when they're going to be ready to buy.

They overtly raise their hand and say, "Hey, I'm interested in buying by a connected RFI or RFQ process." But we can also analyze the myriad data that's available today and put both unstructured data and structured data together in a way that helps us predict when they are going to be ready to buy. That's when we can actually present them with compelling offers. So it really does change the whole nature of the game.

What's appealing?

Gardner: Kris Hart, do you really care whether it's the cloud or the networked economy, or whether it's structured or unstructured data? What appeals to you in all this in terms of the change that's going on?

Hart: In general, you don't really care one way or another how you get it. the cloud and e-commerce makes everything a lot easier, not just for the seller, but also the buyer. It really helps with the relationship, and being on the cloud is much simpler, faster, and easier.

Gardner: Tell us a little bit about LLT Barcode & Label, so that we have a better understanding of your business, the vertical, the challenges that you face in terms of growing your business, and finding new customers?

Hart: We started about 16 years ago. It was a small company, and we're still a small company, where it's hard to get out in front of buyers. When we started, we would send out about a half-million catalogs a year. Those catalogs have inside them labels, thermal transfer ribbons, and laser labels, and items like mobile computers and printers to be able to print those items.

Hart
We started out as a small company, basically a distributor for a company that needs to ship a label via FedEx, UPS, or however. They need a label on that box to be able to ship their product. So as far as vertical markets go, if you name a company, they have to ship something, and they'd be able to use that.

So we play in every single market out there. We gross roughly about $12 million a year and we have about 15 people who work for us.

Gardner: So, you're a mid-market firm, with potentially a very wide addressable market with anyone that's doing shipping and delivery activities. How did you do lead generation and sales and marketing before you started the cloud methods that seemingly have been so successful?

Hart: The way we started is that we would have a lot of catalogs printed with our most popular items and then we would buy lists from Hoover’s, or somebody like that, and we would send out half a million catalogs a year.

We were hoping that everyone who got one of those catalogs would call us and want to buy something. But that's not the case, and over the past 15 years, that return on investment (ROI) has gone down significantly.

We started out as a catalog company, and now the catalog companies are, in a sense, dying or aren't as successful by and large. So we had to find new ways to grow our business.

Gardner: Correct me if I am wrong, but that was mostly you pushing your message into some other organization, with not a lot of pull necessarily. It seems to me that you would want a little of both, the pull and the push. How did the cloud change that equation?

Internet has helped

Hart: The Internet has really helped. A lot of people at home are using sites like Amazon.com and eBay and they're getting used to just looking on the Internet when they need to buy something.

When they go into work, because it's so easy at home, they want to be able to do the same thing. It's a win-win for both sides. We don't have to print lots of catalogs every year, and they can just find us on our website or search engine via Google, Bing, whatever.

Gardner: Why wasn't it just creating website and being part of the massive index that Google and other search engines use? Why was it better moving towards a structured cloud environment, an e-commerce cloud, a networked economy approach like Ariba Discovery? Why was that different?

Hart: The biggest thing with Ariba Discovery is that it's very much like match.com. We wanted to be in front of buyers when they were ready to place an order. We wanted to be that company that that person on the other end is going to come search for, see us, and give us an opportunity for their business.

If I walk in in the morning, I already have leads there. I already have an opportunity with a buyer who knows what they're looking for. They're out there on Ariba Discovery, asking me, "Can you help me?" That's a lot easier than like the catalog theory, hoping that someone runs across your website.
You know automatically what that buyer is looking for and where that buyer is.

You know automatically what that buyer is looking for and where that buyer is, and hopefully within a couple of sentences, a couple of conversations with them, you can figure out when they need to buy.

Gardner: Back to you, Rachel. When you hear Kris describing how they’ve come to these new approaches, what are you thinking? What is it that occurs to you?

It seems to me that he is talking about an ability for a mid-market company to scale down to the individual. It's pretty impressive, the granularity with which commerce could happen. Not only that, but at the scale of a global marketplace, it's kind of fascinating that it’s both downscale and upscale at the same time.

Spasser: It is, and I think if you listen to what Kris said, the Internet has enabled business to be done faster and for him to find new customers faster and more efficiently.

But where the business networks really differentiate themselves from the Internet as a whole is that there is a common platform, where both buyers and sellers are going to connect and find very specific commodities or services that meet their specifications. Creating a platform that enables them to get to that level of granularity enables them not just to conduct commerce faster, but conduct commerce smarter.

More and more data

As we look at the value of the business networks, over the course of time, these networks are, in essence, aggregating more and more data and insights that ultimately help companies like LLT Bar Code in that mid-market that want to do business globally. At the same time, it helps global buyers that want to buy, for various reasons, from companies that are either local suppliers, from companies that might have green initiatives, women-owned business, or diverse-owned business.

So there are a lot of different criteria that go into determining who you want to buy from or sell to. The beauty of the business network is that it gives you the ability to both get insight and get a lot of information on the buyer or the seller, and to connect based on very, very specific criteria.

Gardner: Kris, one of the things that’s interesting in comparing a web-based open-Internet approach to something more standardized is speaking the same language, data, metadata, taxonomy. It might be one thing for you to put up information on your website, but somebody who's searching, or even the search engine algorithms, might not understand the importance of certain terms and lingo.

Is there something about going into environments dedicated to buying and selling, where you can actually line up the right information, description, indexing and terms, or even just the way of doing business, the process behind doing business? Tell me how a common understood business-oriented environment has helped with your results as well?

Hart: Well, with Ariba Discovery it’s great. They have postings for all sorts of commodities and items that a buyer may be looking for. A buyer can check them off on his screen and then send out an RFQ.
With Ariba Discovery it’s great. They have postings for all sorts of commodities and items that a buyer may be looking for.

The nice thing about having that similar platform is that I set up a profile. I select specific commodities of the types of business and the items that we operate in. With that, a lead is automatically given to me. The buyers are looking for specific things, and it may be in his own terms or maybe a little bit different than how he may search it on the Internet and possibly miss us.

I can take my list of commodities and then it will be automatically generated. It’s going to come pretty close. He is going to be right there for me to be able to respond to whether or not we can help them, yes or no.

Gardner: So those hit-or-miss semantic issues that are certainly part of the Web are fixed and amended. Your semantic matchmaking, as you put it earlier, is automated and therefore that probably makes this a lot more powerful. Tell me how powerful. What are some examples of what’s happened when you have gone to Ariba Discovery for lead generation and new market penetration?

Hart: We started looking at Ariba Discovery in late 2011. We were trying to find some other way to gain new customers and to grow the business. We decided on Ariba Discovery in January of 2012. There were a couple of RFPs out there, and I thought, "Why not give it a shot?"

So we respond to a couple, and the first RFQ that I had responded to was for some blank labels and a couple of colored labels. A couple of weeks later I get an email from the client that had posted the RFQ, and they want us to bid on their entire distribution, labels, ribbons, and shipping items.

Too good to be true

And after going through their process of RFQs, add-in items, pricing, and everything else, we won about a $400,000 deal via Ariba Discovery. That was for a two-year contract, and that was the first one. It was almost too good to be true.

The great thing about it was that we started in the middle of January, when I responded to the RFQ and we had the contract and everything signed and they were buying from us in April. Very quick process.

Gardner: What was your cost in acquiring this customer?

Hart: With Ariba Discovery, you can use Ariba Discovery for free or you can use the Mid-Level or the Advantage. And we decided to go with the Advantage.

That had some other benefits with the profile and things of that nature and it was only $3,000. We decided to take some of our marketing budget and put it into that and at least give it a shot. We were more than happy. We got our ROI right-away, and it's a much better and simpler process than sending out a half a million catalogs a year.

Gardner: Absolutely. Rachel, again reacting to what Kris has said, are we missing anything in this equation? I'm interested in this semantic match-up that takes place, the data, and how this can be automated. Kris is obviously talking about strong ROI. Is there more to the story here that we’re missing in terms of how buyers and sellers are matching up in new ways?
You’re not wasting your time. You’re not sifting through a lot of unqualified opportunities as the seller.

Spasser: We love to hear stories like Kris’ about immediate ROI. And we hear them over-and-over again from suppliers on the network.

One benefit, as we talked about, is the ability to define very specific criteria as a seller as to what you sell, so that when you do get posts that are directed to you, you know that they're relevant to you. You’re not wasting your time. You’re not sifting through a lot of unqualified opportunities as the seller. And the benefit to the buyer is the same.

As the buyer posts, their posts are being sent to people who are all qualified, who all have the ability to meet the specifications that they have created. Therefore, it's saving a lot of time on their part as well. When you look at the two-sided model, it really is a win-win both for the buyer and the seller within the network.

One of the hidden pieces of gold within the network is the data that's created over time from all of this transactional information, as well as data that is created individually from buyers and seller. They're providing information on ratings and reviews of how quickly they got paid, if they're a seller, by a particular buyer. Or it's the reverse, how accurate and on time deliveries are if you’re a buyer looking at a seller.

So, the unstructured information, combined with a lot of structured data, is creating an opportunity to make much better matches and have buyers and sellers that are much more informed about one another as they enter into business relationship.

We all know the more that we understand and have well-defined expectations of our business partners, the more effective those relationships are over the course of time.

Some structure

Gardner: Kris, you've obviously been exploiting and enjoying benefits from the discovery aspects of the Ariba network in the cloud. But, beyond the actual finding of that customer, that customer might have many years of business to be had and there needs to be perhaps some automation or structure around that relationship.

Have you been able to find that the services around process for procurement, automating the invoicing and PO process, the data, even the transactions. Is there sort of a progression here that, once you've established a connection with a customer, there are other ways to exploit these services and make that a more efficient customer relationship?

Hart: Yeah, it's funny that you bring that up. Right now, that particular customer has gone to Ariba for some other items that they are going to start using for procurement and different items like that. What we're hoping is that once that process takes over, then we can be in the supplier network and possibly even set up e-catalogs for them and make their process a whole lot more efficient and easier.

That way, if they have any transition in buyers, someone is on vacation, or anything like that, there are no questions about the items that they purchased from us. There are no questions on the pricing, on who to send the purchase orders to, or anything like that. It's all handled by Ariba.
You can now start connecting with multiple buyers via the network, which enables you to create even greater efficiencies.

Hopefully, we'll be able to set up a catalog, and they'll be able to smoothly purchase from us. It already helps us being on the supplier network and then them hopefully getting ramped up and making everything a whole lot more smooth.

Gardner: Rachel, it seems as if Discovery is an important part of this, but it's really kind of the point on the arrow. There's a lot of wood behind that in terms of more streamlining and more efficiency. How are the new services being brought to bear on helping mid-market companies like LLT extend their benefits beyond the lead generation into the whole e-commerce lifecycle?

Spasser: It's great to hear Kris talk about the benefits as it relates to efficiency from a process perspective on the network. One of the other benefits of setting up a catalog to do business with that one buyer on the network is that now you have the catalog set up on the network.

As you get additional buyers, you're using the same catalog and the same infrastructure. You can now start connecting with multiple buyers via the network, which enables you to create even greater efficiencies as a mid-market seller who may have limited resources within the company to issue and reconcile invoices.

The efficiency of setting up one relationship is the starting point. There is much more efficiency as you start to establish more-and-more relationships as a seller over the network. But there are other services that we offer over the network that also create value, and one example is our Dynamic Discounting Program.

For example, as a seller on the network if you would like to get paid faster from one of your buyers, you can offer different payment terms. Let's say your contract is a net-60 payment term, and you’d like to get paid faster because you’d like to make some capital investments in your company. You could offer to provide a discount for a net-10 payment.

Discount terms

We have many mid-market suppliers who have offered those discount terms to their buyers, so that they can self-fund growth for their own companies. That's yet another benefit of doing business on the network.

The third major benefit is the visibility and predictability that you have in relationship with the customer. At any point in time, as a seller on the network, you can go in and see the status of where your order stands, where your payment stands, or whether your invoice has been approved for payment.

It gives you a lot more visibility, and therefore predictability, as a mid-size business, into things like cash flow. You can anticipate when you're going to get paid, instead of having to pick up the phone 16 times and say, "When is the check is going to come? Have you approved the invoice?"

So there's efficiency, visibility, and predictability, and then there is the opportunity to impact cash flow by using some of the more sophisticated tools like Dynamic Discounting to speed up payment.

Gardner: Rachel, Tell me a little bit about some of the future roadmap that Ariba is embarking on around a wider, deeper, richer basket of goods and services.
So there's efficiency, visibility, and predictability, and then there is the opportunity to impact cash flow by using some of the more sophisticated tools like Dynamic Discounting to speed up payment.

Spasser: One of the things that we are doing, really focused on the lead generation side, is expanding the services that we offer around Ariba Discovery that can help companies like LLT Barcode & Label find new customers worldwide.

Related to that is the ability to create multiple profiles that are very highly targeted. So for the various products that LLT Barcode & Label offers, they could create a profile unique to different industries. Or if there are different industry requirements around labels and barcodes, they can create very specific, targeted profiles that really make them extremely relevant to buyers within various industries.

Another service that we are offering is what we are calling "Sellers You Might Like," and that's the ability to based on what someone is searching on proactively suggest sellers that meet their criteria.

So even if a buyer does a search and doesn't necessarily click on a particular supplier, if that supplier meets those criteria from an algorithm perspective, that suppler will be proactively suggested, especially if that supplier has received high ratings and reviews from other buyers on the network.

So there are couple of new services that are being offered from the Discovery side that will really accelerate the ability for mid-market companies like LLT Barcode & Label to grow their business and expand the value that they get from using the Ariba network.

How to get started

Gardner: I'm afraid we're just about out of time, but Kris, I wonder if you might have any 20-20 hindsight, based on your experiences so far, that you could offer to other people who are looking to get started on this cloud-based, commerce and lead generation activity.

How do you get started? What would you recommend for others as they embark on this?

Hart: Definitely give it a shot. Set up a free profile and start getting some leads generated, something that comes your way. Definitely make sure you're in the right commodities. Don't start clicking boxes for commodities that you can't offer. That way, your leads are more precise and more ready to go Then see what happens for free.
Definitely give it a shot. Set up a free profile and start getting some leads generated.

If you want extra help and a little bit better outreach with the marketing profile, go up the next step or even all the way to the top like we did. We saw the benefits and doing that with the marketing help that we have from Ariba and how to use the Discovery tool. As I said, that paid off for us, but definitely give it a shot. If nothing else, just set up a free profile and see where that takes you.

Gardner: All right. Well I'm afraid we'll have to leave it there. You've been listening to a sponsored BriefingsDirect podcast discussion on ways that businesses are using cloud and e-commerce to improve how they do sales, marketing, and ultimately online transactions.

We've seen how one company Ohio-based LLT Barcode & Label, has found a highly effective way to develop new sales and leads using Ariba Discovery. So let's thank our guests, Kris Hart, Account Manager at LLT Barcode & Label. Thank you so much, Kris.

Hart: Thanks a lot. I appreciate it, Dana.

Gardner: And also Rachel Spasser, Senior Vice President of Marketing at Ariba, an SAP Company. Thank you, Rachel.

Spasser: Thanks, Dana. I appreciate the opportunity.

Gardner: This is Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions. Thanks a lot to our audience for listening, and don't forget to come back next time.

Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes. Download the transcript. Sponsor: Ariba, an SAP company.

Transcript of a BriefingsDirect on how a mid-market company saw immediate results from participation in Ariba Discovery, eliminating the need for mailing half a million catalogs a year. Copyright Interarbor Solutions, LLC, 2005-2013. All rights reserved.

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Monday, August 19, 2013

VMware vCloud Hybrid Service Powers Journey to Zero-Cost Applications Support for City of Melrose

Transcript of a BriefingsDirect podcast on how one municipality has broadened its own IT infrastructure to become a managed-service provider for other cities and towns.

Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes. Download the transcript. Sponsor: VMware.

Dana Gardner: Hi, this is Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions, and you're listening to BriefingsDirect.

Gardner
Today, we present a sponsored podcast discussion on how a small city outside of Boston has embraced hybrid cloud computing to host not only its own applications, but also those of nearby communities. In doing so, the City of Melrose, Massachusetts, plans to reduce the cost of supporting its applications to perhaps zero -- and maybe even generate revenue -- as a specialized managed-services provider.

To learn more about this early adopter municipality approach to cloud computing, and how they transitioned from nearly 100 percent server virtualization to a novel cloud capability built on VMware vCloud Hybrid Service (vCHS), please join me now in welcoming our guests. We're here with Jorge Pazos, the Chief Information Officer in the City of Melrose. Welcome, Jorge. [Disclosure: WMware is a sponsor of BriefingsDirect podcasts.]

Jorge Pazos: Thank you.

Gardner: We're also here with Colby Cousens, IT System Administrator in the City of Melrose. Welcome, Colby.

Colby Cousens: Thank you.

Gardner: Jorge, let me start with you. As you looked to extend the benefits of server virtualization, what were some of the top requirements as a CIO for moving to cloud and hybrid-cloud infrastructure?

Pazos: A lot of this is driven by both challenges that we face and opportunities that we see. Like you said, we're an IT department for a mid-size town in Massachusetts. We offer services to all of our internal departments and we're beginning to grow out into a managed-service provider. Part of what we're looking to do internally is grow that managed-service provider part of the business, but then also take care of a lot of the day-to-day stuff.

Pazos
If you think about building a data center, which is what we did about three or four years ago, it was a top-to-bottom upgrade of our data center. One of the things that you immediately start to think about is your disaster recovery (DR). When you're a small municipality with five square miles, where do you put a DR site that gives you diverse power providers, and geographical diversity?

It doesn't make sense to invest heavily in a DR site that’s somewhere within the same town. So we were really looking to cloud-service providers to provide that for us. That was one of the big drivers for us, and we really didn't feel comfortable growing the business too much without having at least that capability somewhere, as part of our service offering.

Gardner: When you were looking for a DR capability that opened up your eyes to what hybrid cloud was capable of. Was that the beginning of seeing more than the virtualization benefits of being able to replicate workloads and have elasticity and look to optimization benefits beyond your on-premises server?

DR site

Pazos: We really wanted to have a fully functional DR site, and we looked at a lot of the cloud service providers. This isn’t a point-in-time perspective. This is something that we've been doing over the last three or four years.

Three or four years ago, there weren’t a whole lot of cloud-service providers that we felt could do what we were looking to do. So when we had this opportunity to participate in the beta for the vCHS, we were really excited. There was quite a bit of promise in it for us in terms of things that we felt were important, like interoperability, security,  performance, and things like that.

And after the launch actually one of the things that we are pretty excited about that we didn't see in the past was cost predictability, which we don't really see a whole lot from a lot of the other service providers.

Gardner: I'm sure if you are going to embrace a hybrid-cloud model, and test and evaluate a product like be vCHS, you might recognize that if you do this first, you've learned the lessons and acquired skills. How did that idea come about to take this into this extension of what other municipalities would be seeking?

Pazos: It’s not that big of a stretch, when you think about it. What we're doing is providing services to other cities and towns. That is what we do on a day-to-day basis in one municipality. The way that municipalities are run, especially from an IT perspective, there isn’t a great deal of diversity. We could pretty much run IT for almost any city or town, because the apps are very similar and the business processes are all very similar.

It’s not that big of a stretch to get to that point where you say, "I can do this for another city or town." That was actually the thought process several years ago, as we started to do our own internal consolidation. The idea was that if we do it for ourselves, why can’t we do it for others. It’s not that much of a leap to get there.

Cousens
Cousens: We can get some practice consolidating city and school networks and data centers and realize it's the same thing. We could do it with other the municipalities as well.

Gardner: Colby, that was going to be my question. What requirements did you have in terms of what was needed in order to make this possible if you were going to integrate and consolidate with the cloud infrastructure approach for different divisions within your town? Sure, you can extend that to other municipalities, but what was important for you to be able to do that in terms of the solutions available?

Cousens: Compatibility was the biggest issue for me. I didn’t want to run into any roadblocks with software or hardware that wouldn't work with each other, so we would have had to drop the project just because two things wouldn't connect.

Gardner: Let’s get a sense of what we're dealing with here in terms of your scale and your size. Tell me about Melrose, the applications, the number of users, and your infrastructure. What are we talking about in terms of IT organization?

Modest deployment

Pazos: It is a fairly modest deployment by service provider standards, but I think by municipal standards, we're decent size. Currently, we're at about 70 virtual machines (VMs) with 30 terabytes of storage. We connect our regional partners the way that we connect these communities, Essex is about 30 miles away, and Saugus is a direct neighbor. To connect these guys back to our data centers, we use an ENS circuit, which is basically a Layer 2 connection between the two sites that can be ramped up.

They come up in base of 10 Mbps and then they can go straight up to a 10 Gbps . We run several SQL databases, which includes our financial system. We run Microsoft Exchange, Public Safety Dispatch. There is a CAD, Computer Aided Dispatch/Records Management application, and database. We also have virtual desktops. Our entire emergency dispatch operations are all running on virtual desktops, as well as point of sale for virtual desktops.

So we run quite a few different apps, many of which are obviously pretty mission critical, and the demand is growing. We are going to be on-boarding Saugus through the summer and into the fall. So we'll be experiencing some growth through that process as well.

Gardner: Just for our audience, Essex and Saugus are also municipalities in Massachusetts, and you have been experimenting and bringing them on, so that they become paying customers to you. Do you think it is possible at some point that you're going to cover your IT cost by doing this managed-service provider business.
I also think that the services we offer to the city are better because of our equipment.

Pazos: Early on, it got to a point where we couldn't do it, but it looks to me like now we're potentially going to be in a position where maybe five or six additional clients get us to the point where we are revenue neutral to the city. That's looking a little bit more realistic for us in terms of both getting people to warm to the idea and also being able to support it.

Revenue neutral would be absolutely fantastic. If you're taxpayer in the City of Melrose and you can have a department that offers all of its services internally and be completely revenue neutral, I would be ecstatic about that.

Cousens: I also think that the services we offer to the city are better because of our equipment. Our refresh schedule is better. The stuff that we're using is more enterprise grade, because we're using it in the hosting environment and providing to a number of partners.

Gardner: Let's look at the equation of how the economics of this work from the perspective of your client municipalities, for lack of a better word. When Essex and Saugus evaluate this, are they going to be able to get their IT services from you cheaper and with a higher performance than they would have been able to do it themselves?

Pazos: There are two ways to look at that. Town of Essex has reduced their IT expenditures by 33 percent year over year. So they're immediately seeing savings every year. The story in the Town of Saugus was a little bit different. They had an IT department that had inherited infrastructure that was getting old and needed to be refreshed. They were able to buy into the service and not have to incur a large upfront cost of doing a forklift upgrade of their entire IT infrastructure.

Year-to-year savings

They're saving, year one, somewhere in the vicinity of about $80,000 or just north of $75,000. Then, there's the year-over-year savings that they're seeing. So for this three-year agreement, they feel like they're saving quite a bit of money.

Gardner: Colby, given that you had a very strong set of requirements around compatibility of being able to move from your on-premises infrastructure into a hybrid cloud model, what about Essex and Saugus? Were they also highly virtualized in their servers and workloads, and how did the compatibility from them work, moving toward your vCloud Hybrid Service set up?

Cousens: That wasn’t as much of an issue for us, because they weren't really virtualized yet at all. So part of the on-boarding process for them is virtualizing all of their servers and doing some virtual-desktop offerings, too. We got to start fresh with virtualization onsite for their services.

Gardner: I suppose you could look at that as another added value. You're actually modernizing them or guiding them into a more optimized IT infrastructure with a higher utilization. You're also helping them decide which of their services to get from the source, in this case the one that you are managing, versus perhaps a cloud provider that would not have the expertise in the customization that they're looking for.
Not only are we saving them money, but we're able to provide them services that they weren’t providing for themselves.

Pazos: Absolutely. Not only are we saving them money, but we're able to provide them services that they weren’t providing for themselves. A lot of these guys didn’t have offsite data replication.

They didn't have DR site capability. It was a pretty traditional small data center, a server room type set up in a building. Everything was a single point of failure. We're not only saving them money, but we're providing a higher level of service than they would have ordinarily been able to achieve.

Cousens: Again, in the case of Essex, the town manager is doing the IT work too. So besides the financial piece, he was having a hard time focusing on his IT stuff as well.

Pazos: I think it's important for anyone listening to the podcast that to understand that, a lot of these are small governments scattered around the state. The $75,000 that Saugus is saving this year is very big money in small town government.

In the case of Essex, quite often, people are doing double duty. They're the town accountant and the IT person, or the town administrator and the IT person. So they are also gaining from freeing themselves up to focus on their primary roles. In the town of Essex, he's able to focus on being the town administrator. That’s life in small town government in Massachusetts.

Gardner: As time goes on, it sounds like you want on-board other municipalities making them a good deal, where everybody feels like they're improving the situation at a good cost, compared to what they would have been paying otherwise. Over the next two or three years, what are you going to be looking for in terms of cloud capabilities?

There is, of course, the infrastructure, and you want the compatibility that we heard about. What about public-cloud services? Are there costs, compatibility issues, location or compliance issues? What do you think about when you look down the road towards the public-cloud components within a hybrid cloud deployment?

Competition important

Pazos: One of the important things is competition and, hopefully, as everything matures, that cost will come down. Again, for small town government, that’s extremely important. I think a lot these towns wouldn’t have this as an option, because the costs simply are just too much for them. So we would like to see to the cost come down.

Gardner: That would be a function of choice, of having a marketplace, right?

Pazos: Absolutely, yes, and with competition, hopefully that will come to be. One of the reasons that we invested the time into vCHS beta was that we really felt it was important to focus on that. We went through Beta 1 and 2, we would have done the Early Adopter Program (EAP) as well, except that we were in the midst of on-boarding Saugus.

We really committed some time to do Beta 1 and Beta 2, because I think the promise of the service offering was fantastic. We really felt like there was an opportunity there to play with a product that was extending our existing data center out into the cloud, and it blurred the lines between what was on-premises, and what was out in the cloud.
One of the primary reasons that we're looking at this is DR and business continuity.

Ideally, that's what we would like to see. When you're your managing a pool of resources, you're not really managing on-premises stuff and cloud stuff. We would like it be one large pool of resources that you are managing. I think that would be ideal.

Gardner: To circle back to some of your earlier reasons for going about this, you get that business continuity benefit. You know that your resources are going to be available, and if something goes wrong along the line within your organization, you have someone covering your back.

Pazos:  One of the primary reasons that we're looking at this is DR and business continuity. I need that diversity in being able to have different geographical zones, having somebody out in Nevada, California or wherever. That’s a diversity that is, otherwise, really impossible for me to get. So that's an important thing.

Gardner: How about some 20/20 hindsight, for those who are listening and reading about your story and experience. What might have you had done differently? Do you have any advice for those who might be also considering adopting a hybrid cloud or maybe even pursuing the notion of being either a consumer or provider of these managed services?

Pazos: When we look back at this, it’s surprising to me how we were very fortunate with timing. A lot of the things that we needed seem to have been rolling out at right around the time we needed it, which was fantastic for us.

What I would say is, whatever you've been waiting for, don’t wait. It's to the point where you just want to move ahead, and for some of this, you're going to have to adapt and sort of figure out as you go and as things evolve.

There were times early on, where we were frankly a little hesitant to do some things, because, to be honest with you, we spoke to a lot of folks in other cities and towns who just sort of cocked their heads a little bit and looked at us and said, "Really? Why are you doing this? Why would you want to do this? This seems sort of crazy." So there was a little bit of hesitation at times as we moved forward.

Solid idea

But the idea seemed solid, and we went ahead with it. That's the advice for folks -- don't really wait. Do your research, do your homework, understand what it is that you're getting yourself into, but certainly move ahead, because I really feel like this is the way we're going to be doing business. I know we are doing businesses right now, but I think a lot of folks are going to be doing business this way at some point in the near future.

Gardner: Colby what about you?

Cousens: Experimentation is key. A lot of the technologies are complicated to just look at or read about. Get in there and do an evaluation or download trial versions of different products, like we did with the Beta, with vCHS. You just have to try it out and play with it. Then you start to realize the true value as you apply it to actual use cases.
Experimentation is key. . . . Get in there and do an evaluation or download trial versions of different products.

Gardner: Well, great. I am afraid we will have to leave it there. We've been talking about how a small city outside of Boston has embraced the hybrid-cloud computing to host not only its own applications, but those of nearby communities as well.

We learned how the City of Melrose, Massachusetts, plans to reduce the cost of supporting its application down to zero by transitioning from high server virtualization to revenue making managed services built on a cloud capability, and they have been so far using VMware vCloud Hybrid Service as a beta user to experiment and perfect this approach.

Thank you very much to our guests, Jorge Pazos, the CIO, the Chief Information Officer at the City of Melrose. Thank you, Jorge.

Pazos: Thank you.

Gardner: And also, we have been here with Colby Cousens, the IT Systems Administrator there in Melrose. Thank you so much, Colby.

Cousens: Thank you also.

Gardner: This is Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions. Thanks, also to all audience for joining, and don’t forget to come back next time.

Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes. Download the transcript. Sponsor: VMware.

Transcript of a BriefingsDirect podcast on how one municipality has broadened its own IT infrastructure to become a managed-service provider for other cities and towns. Copyright Interarbor Solutions, LLC, 2005-2013. All rights reserved.

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Friday, August 09, 2013

Here's Why Healthcare Businesses Must Efficiently Manage Their Suppliers, Purchases and Processes

Transcript of a BriefingsDirect podcast on how a major healthcare services company is leveraging tools from Ariba to cut costs and improve efficiency.

Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes. Download the transcript. Sponsor: Ariba, an SAP Company.

Dana Gardner: Hello, and welcome to a special BriefingsDirect podcast series coming to you from the recent 2013 Ariba LIVE Conference.

Gardner
We're here to explore the latest in collaborative commerce and to learn how innovative companies are tapping into the networked economy. We'll see how they are improving their business productivity and sales, along with building far-reaching relationships with new partners and customers.

I'm Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions, and I'll be your host throughout the series of Ariba-sponsored BriefingsDirect discussions.

Our next innovator interview focuses on MedAssets, a healthcare industry procurement, spend, operations, and supply-chain services company, which currently manages some $50 billion of supply spend for its customers annually.

We'll learn how the healthcare sector has unique operational efficiency and regulatory challenges and how MedAssets, in partnership with Ariba, an SAP company, has found ways to improve health provider and supplier compliance, reduce costs, and develop better accuracy.

To hear how they did it, please join me in welcoming our guest, Rick Grodin, Senior Vice President of Product Management at MedAssets, based in Alpharetta, Georgia. Welcome.

Rick Grodin: It's great to be here. Thanks for having me.

Gardner: We’re here at a very busy Ariba LIVE Conference, and one of the things that people are dealing with is how to make their particular vertical industry and the particulars of their own company work within a broader infrastructure and networked economy. I'm particularly interested in the healthcare industry.

Rick, what's going on in healthcare and why is this such an important area for focusing on innovation, productivity, and cost reduction?

Grodin: We manage spend on behalf of 3,000-plus providers, both on the non-acute care side, as well as in the for-profit and not-for-profit acute care hospital community. The challenges that they're facing are quite remarkable, both from an incremental-cost perspective, whether that be supply cost or labor cost, as well as continued pressure on what are already razor-thin operating margins -- typically between 0 and 3 percent.

Significant consequences

With the Affordable Care Act coming down the pike, officially passed and certainly soon to be implemented, reimbursement per unit is going to come down materially for hospitals, and that’s going to have significant consequences on provider operations and financial health.

Grodin
As millions of new people come into the healthcare system, likely to be reimbursed through the state exchanges somewhere between Medicaid and Medicare rates, that’s going to have a significant impact on that operating margin, because hospitals are already losing money at Medicaid and Medicare rates.

You're going to have a significant influx of new patient volume at lower reimbursements. Therefore, the need for the healthcare community to take out substantial cost over the next couple of years is just going to continue to intensify significantly.

Anything that we can do, as a healthcare provider partner, to help them bring down those costs from a back-office operational efficiency perspective is going to be extremely important.

Gardner: How do we get those better efficiencies, not only from within an organization which has been under way for some time and will continue, but when you go outside your borders? When you look toward supply chains, the networked economy, and cloud providers, what's the control point? How do you exercise control and management, when these are outside the borders of your healthcare-provider organization?
It’s not only about how we can improve the financial health of our hospital customers, but also our supplier partners.

Grodin: For us, specifically at MedAssets, the supplier community is extremely important to us. It’s not only about how we can improve the financial health of our hospital customers, but also our supplier partners. If we can continue to work with our supplier partners to bring down their cost, they can then pass along those efficiencies and offer lower price points to our provider customers. So it’s a win-win for everybody.

Today, through MedAssets eCommerce Exchange and transaction management services, we help create a more efficient operating environment, with respect to getting purchase orders to suppliers. But because it’s through an EDI-based system, it’s basically just getting paper there more quickly, as opposed to correcting and rejecting invoices that are wrong on the front-end, so that they don’t need to be worked on the back end.

Creating a more efficient operating environment with respect to that paper purchase order (PO) or invoice, and basically enabling a provider and a supplier to conduct that commerce through the cloud, our exchange, or a combination thereof, will create significant operating efficiencies on both sides of the house.

Now, all of a sudden, the accounts payable clerk that’s sitting in a hospital doesn’t have to manage an exception. Today, they're constantly struggling with whether the PO price is the same as the contract price and the same as the invoice price. In many instances, it’s not.

So they need to circle back with the supplier to say, "The invoice is wrong, and you need to fix it." Or they need to circle back internally and ask why they're cutting a PO that doesn’t match the contract price, whether it’s a locally negotiated contract or a contract through a group purchasing organization.

Added value

So, it's the ability to catch those invoice exceptions upfront. All of that exception management activity can be repurposed to value-add activities internally, whether that’s reinvesting completely in patient care delivery or just repurposing those FTEs on the back end to again do more value-added activities that are not related to just managing an exception.

Gardner: I'd like to hear more about how Ariba and MedAssets work together, but let's learn more about MedAssets first. Tell us a bit about the history of your company, what you do, and the size, so we have a better sense of how you fit in this picture.

Grodin: We touch approximately 4,200 acute-care hospitals across the country, as well as over 120,000 non-acute care providers. We have two operating segments within the organization.

The one that I primarily focus on for product management is our Spend and Clinical Resource Management group. Within this segment, we deliver value to providers through our  group purchasing organization, technology-enabled services, an analytics platform and procure-to-pay solutions that are all aimed at reducing cost on behalf of our providers.

The other element that we bring to the table is through our Advisory Solutions group, which is a number of consulting practices that can address operational improvement opportunities or other areas of cost that are not impacted just through procurement or through a group purchasing organization.
As most people are aware, labor cost is approximately 50 to 60 percent of total cost for a hospital. It’s a significant area of opportunity.

As an example, we have a phenomenal group that focuses on clinical utilization and bringing down physician preference-item costs. We have a group that focuses on permanent labor and agency labor. As most people are aware, labor cost is approximately 50 to 60 percent of total cost for a hospital. It’s a significant area of opportunity.

Finally, we bring lean transformation and process-improvement capabilities to healthcare through another practice in our Advisory Solutions group. There have been tremendous benefits brought through Lean to other industries, and we're trying to bring that to the healthcare environment as well.

Gardner: Looking back into MedAssets, what other tools do you have in your toolbox, to use your phrase, that you can help health providers improve their financial standing?

Grodin: As I mentioned before we have our Spend and Clinical Resource Management segment that manages over $50 billion in spend, but we also have another large operating segment where we provide revenue cycle management services.

So we have a whole suite of technologies that can impact everything -- the front, middle and back portion of the revenue cycle -- as well as the Revenue Cycle Services group that provides both consulting services, as well as a shared-service environment for taking on revenue-cycle activities within a hospital environment.

Gardner: How about the relationship between MedAssets and Ariba? Do you utilize their services in their cloud activities, technologies, and processes, and then apply that through your's? Is this an ecosystem type of relation? How does it work?

Two fronts

Grodin: Our relationship with Ariba is on two fronts. We're currently in the process of implementing their Procure-to-Pay solution for our own internal use within MedAssets, and our team is extremely excited about how things are going so far.

I was mainly focused on working with the Ariba team on putting together the strategic partnership that we announced in early April and that we're extremely excited about. We wanted to partner with the leader in global e-commerce and there was no doubt that that was the Ariba team.

We’d like to bring the capabilities that are proven in other industries, where Ariba has basically gone to market and been extremely successful, and bring those similar cloud-based and network activities into healthcare.

As I alluded to before, we have our own eCommerce Exchange and Transaction Management services, as well as a partnership on the front-end for requisitioning through Prodigo.

Historically, we've done a very good job of working with the buyers in hospitals to requisition an item and get that purchase order out through our eCommerce Exchange and Transaction Management services to the vendor. Where we’ve fallen short is in helping our suppliers and providers get that invoice back most efficiently.
The other thing that’s extremely exciting about what Ariba brings to the table is the fact that they have over one million vendors on their network.

What's great about the Ariba Network is that we can link our eCommerce Exchange with the Ariba Network to enable a more efficient transaction process. We enable providers to get a PO out through our eCommerce Exchange or through the Ariba Network electronically, and then enable suppliers to send that invoice back electronically through their exchange or through invoice conversion services, which is basically taking the paper invoice and converting it into an electronic invoice.

Multiple benefits come out of that. It’s a perfect complement to what MedAssets has already been doing in the healthcare community with our provider clients, but taking it to the next level. The other thing that’s extremely exciting about what Ariba brings to the table is the fact that they have over one million vendors on their network.

Today, we do commerce through our exchange with about 350 traditional medical/surgical vendors, whereas Ariba has perfected the world that they call "indirect spend" and we call "purchased services." That's a huge unlock both for us and for the provider community.

We believe that purchased services spend is just as big as the spend that goes through the GPO, if not even bigger. Typically, that has been a very hard area for providers to get their arms around, because they haven’t had access to the data.

The main reason for that is that most of the purchased services spend is a non-PO transaction. So it’s very hard to get to that granular line-item level detail to break down that spend, whether it’s by contract category or specific vendor. You can’t manage anything if you can’t see it.

Significant value

So we're extremely excited about leveraging the Ariba Network and working with them to capture 100 percent of provider spend, not just med/surg and PO-backed spend, but all of the spend that’s coming out of the hospital. The value this can bring to the provider community is significant.

Gardner: It sounds like a really good marriage between the general approach that Ariba can have and the more verticalized, specialized approach that you have. It's sort of the best of both worlds. What did you do before Ariba, and how long have you been working with them?

Grodin: We've been in dialogue with Ariba for several months about a strategic partnership. We hadn't worked with Ariba in the past so this is a new relationship. But after speaking to customers of theirs, doing our due diligence in other industries, and talking to some of their healthcare clients today, we knew that this would be a great strategic fit both for us and for them.

Gardner: Rick, tell me a bit more about how the services at MedAssets and some of the capabilities at Ariba coming together to offer you the capabilities to deliver into the market things that perhaps you've never been done before.
Ariba has created a smart invoicing capability, because it’s a network, as opposed to just an EDI pipe.

Grodin: This is where I get very excited about the potential of what Ariba and MedAssets can do together in the marketplace. As I mentioned before, we have our eCommerce Exchange, which is EDI-based, and we can get a certain portion of invoices back electronically through our exchange.

There are other offerings in the marketplace that are very similar, but really what they do is just get a paper invoice back into the provider’s hands more quickly. But you don’t know if that invoice is correct. If it’s not correct, there is a whole lot of inefficiency in managing that exception on the backend.

Ariba has created a smart invoicing capability, because it’s a network, as opposed to just an EDI pipe. Those invoices that are inaccurate can be rejected on the front-end, so they never even get to the provider until they are accurate.

The best part about it is that rules engine -- and that I believe that you can customize up to 70 different rules -- is dictated by the provider themselves. It’s not a built-in, one-size-fits-all type of solution. Depending on the unique needs of that provider, they can customize that rules engine to reject inaccurate invoices back to the supplier in real-time.

It’s the whole notion of garbage in, garbage out. We're preventing the garbage from coming through, which is then creating those efficiencies in accounts payable. That is absolutely something that’s going to be unique to healthcare and doesn’t exist today, and which again will create tremendous operational efficiencies on the back end.

Because of smart invoicing and the overall transaction efficiency that’s created through the exchange and the network, we're going to be able to enable providers to get invoices in a ready-to-pay status much more quickly. Industry best practice is five days. We've seen metrics, where it could take anywhere between 20 and 40 days to get that invoice approved for most healthcare providers today.

Dynamic discounting

Our relationship with Ariba will enable us to leverage Ariba’s working capital management solutions as well. They’ve got something that they refer to as Dynamic Discounting, which creates the ability to have an ad-hoc negotiation for further cost-of-goods-sold reductions between a provider and a supplier.

Because of the increased visibility into where an invoice is sitting and what the status of that invoice is between suppliers and providers -- something that doesn’t exist in healthcare today -- a supplier can go in and see that an invoice is sitting in a ready-to-pay status.

They can then offer an incremental discount to the provider, so that if the provider  has additional cash on hand and it’s better used to drive additional discounts as opposed to sitting and getting short-term interest, that can make a tremendous amount of sense.

So, there's also the ability to optimize prompt-pay discounts, where appropriate, because we're getting those invoices in a ready-to-pay status much more quickly. So if it’s a two percent discount if you pay within 10 days, and the average invoice isn’t being approved for 20 days, all of a sudden I've missed that window. Even if I have cash on hand, I can’t leverage it.

Even better, if I've missed that prompt-pay window, but am willing to pay on day 20, instead of day 30 or day 40, all of a sudden there is value coming back to the provider as opposed to no incremental value for paying early. It’s just another lever or another tool in the toolkit that we can use to drive further cost reductions in our partnership with Ariba.
As the reimbursement models are changing in healthcare, they're getting more-and-more focused on clinical quality, safety, etc.

Gardner: Of course, healthcare being such a large part of the economy, we're talking about some very large sums of money. But when it comes out to eking out these efficiencies, when you can reduce those paper invoices, when you can streamline the processes, and you can provide the right data at the right time to the right people to make choices to automate over time, what sort of savings are we talking about? Do you have a sense of what the payoffs are when this is done properly?

Grodin: The benefits are significant in a couple of areas, making that back-office function, specifically in AP, more efficient, more scalable, and being able to repurpose the work that was being done in that department and in other back-office administrative areas. Also, the ability to reinvest those resources in front-line patient care delivery.

As the reimbursement models are changing in healthcare, they're getting more-and-more focused on clinical quality, safety, etc. That’s where a hospital’s core focus needs to be, not in the back-office. It needs to be with the patient. Certainly there are significant FTE and operating efficiency benefits created by this partnership, but what we are particularly excited about is more from a contract-compliance perspective.

Through our eCommerce Exchange, our transaction management service, as well as what Ariba is going to bring to the table through PO and invoice automation, invoice conversion services, invoice professional which is their workflow tool, we'll have the ability to ensure that folks are buying on contract where they should be and also ensuring that they are paying the right price. We do a good job today of ensuring that that PO price matches the contract price, but where we have been challenged in the past is the ability to bring that invoice price in.

Significant benefits

It’s going to bring significant benefits, because in some of the research that we're doing with very sophisticated health systems, they're finding that they may only be buying on contract 30-40 percent of the time. So a contract is only as good as its use. If it’s just sitting in a drawer and nobody is accessing it, all the great work that’s been done by their sourcing team or our sourcing team is for naught.

The ability to do all of that in real time, to take that PO price match it up against our contract price and against the invoice price, is going to ensure not only are they buying on contract, but they are paying the right price.

Gardner: As we move further down the road, we see that the technologies in cloud computing and data analysis are being brought to bear on some of these issues of more opportunity, gain insight, see the trends and bargain, and understand what the market will bear, rather than just dealing on a point basis. Do you expect that you'll be looking for more analysis services from providers like Ariba and how important is that in the long-term for further eking out productivity gains?

Grodin: As our relationship continues to blossom with Ariba, I'm sure we’ll be having conversations around their spend visibility and other analytic tools that they can bring to the table. Within MedAssets, we have  our own analytics tools, including service line analytics, spend analytics and pharmacy analytics.
For us, the true unlock is the ability to get access to purchasing and spend data, which is where we are very excited.

For us, the true unlock is the ability to get access to purchasing and spend data, which is where we are very excited. We capture a lot of financial and spend data today, but this purchasing and  indirect spend area is really an untapped horizon where the data and the technology that Ariba is going to bring, in combination with our analytics, people and process, will provide significant benefit.

We currently manage about $5 billion of spend through our National Procurement Center, which is the largest shared services operation of its kind in healthcare today. That combination of people, process, and technology is absolutely going to unlock new opportunities in healthcare from a spend-management and cost-reduction perspective.

Gardner: We’ll have to leave it there. We have been talking about the healthcare sector’s unique operational efficiency and regulatory challenges and how MedAssets, in partnership with Ariba, has found ways to improve health provider and supplier compliance, cost and accuracy of results.

I’d like to thank our guest. We're here with Rick Grodin, Senior Vice President of Product Management at MedAssets. Thank you so much, Rick.

Grodin: Thanks for having me. I’ve enjoyed the discussion.

Gardner: And I’d like to thank our audience for joining us here for this special podcast coming to you from the 2013 Ariba Live Conference held recently in Washington, DC.

I'm Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions, your host throughout this series of Ariba-sponsored BriefingsDirect discussions. Thanks again for listening, and come back next time.

Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes. Download the transcript. Sponsor: Ariba, an SAP Company.

Transcript of a BriefingsDirect podcast on how a major healthcare services company is leveraging tools from Ariba to cut costs and improve efficiency. Copyright Interarbor Solutions, LLC, 2005-2013. All rights reserved.

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Thursday, August 08, 2013

T-Mobile Swaps Manual Cloud Provisioning for Services Portal, Gains Lifecycle Approach to Cloud Across Multiple Platforms and Data Centers

Transcript of a BriefingsDirect podcast on how a major telecom company has improved its IT performance to deliver better experiences and payoffs for its businesses and end users alike.

Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes. Download the transcript. Sponsor: HP.

Dana Gardner: Hello, and welcome to the next edition of the HP Discover Performance Podcast Series. I'm Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions, your moderator for this ongoing discussion of IT innovation and how it’s making an impact on people’s lives.

Gardner
Once again, we're focusing on how IT leaders are improving their services' performance to deliver better experiences and payoffs for businesses and end users alike, and this time we're coming to you directly from the HP Discover 2013 Conference in Las Vegas. [Disclosure: HP is a sponsor of BriefingsDirect podcasts.]

Our next innovation case study interview highlights how wireless services provider T-Mobile US, Inc. improved how it delivers cloud- and data-access services to its enterprise customers. We'll see how T-Mobile walked back use of manual cloud provisioning services and delivered a centralized service portal to manage and deploy infrastructure better and also improve their service offerings across multiple platforms and across multiple data centers.

To learn more about how T-Mobile enabled a lifecycle approach to delivering advanced cloud services, please join me in welcoming our guest, Daniel Spurling, Director of IT Infrastructure at T-Mobile US, Inc. Welcome.

Daniel Spurling: Thanks, Dana.

Gardner: Tell me about the trends that are driving your business now. We know T-Mobile as a mobile provider, but is this speed, is this competition? What are some of the big top-of-mind issues for you and your market?

Spurling: To answer that question, I'm going to frame up a little history and go into where T-Mobile has come from in the last few years and what has driven some of that business shift in our space.

As many know, in 2011 AT&T attempted to acquire T-Mobile. When that dissolved, there was a heavy recognition that we needed to drive greater innovation on our business side. We had received a generous donation, we’ll call it, of $4 billion dollars and a lot a spectrum. We drove a lot of innovation on our network side, on the RF side, but the IT side also had to evolve.

We, as an IT group, were looking at where we needed to start evolving within the infrastructure space, we recognized that manual processes are a very rudimentary way of delivering servers or compute storage, etc. This was not going to meet the agility needs that our business was exhibiting. So we started on this path of driving a significant cultural shift, and mindset shift as well as the actual technological shift in the infrastructure space, with cloud as one of the core anchor points within that.

Gardner: When you decided that cloud was the right model to gain this agility, what were some of the problems that you faced in terms of getting there?

Not a surprise

Spurling: When you talk about cloud, you have to define what cloud is. We recognize that cloud is almost like a progression of where we've been going within IT. It is not like it is a surprise.

Spurling
We've been trying to figure out how to enable more self-service. We've been trying to figure out how to drive greater automation. We've been trying to figure out how to utilize those ubiquitous network access points, the ubiquitous services, external or internal of the company, but in a more standardized and consolidated fashion.

It wasn't so much that we were surprised and said, "Oh, we need to go cloud." It was more on the lines of we recognized that we needed to double down our efforts in those key tenets within cloud. For T-Mobile, those key tenets really were how we drive greater standardization consolidation to enable greater automation and then to provide self-service capabilities to our customers.

Gardner: Were there particular types or sets of applications that you identified as being the first and foremost to go into this new model?

Spurling: That's a great question. A lot of people look at the applications, as either an application play or an infrastructure play, because of the ecosystem that existed when the cloud ecosystem was kind of birthing, a year-and-a-half ago, two years ago. We started more on the infrastructure side. So we looked at it and said, "How do we enable the application growth that you are talking about? How do we enable that from an infrastructure perspective?"
We recognized that we needed to double down our efforts in those key tenets within cloud.

And we saw that we needed to focus more on the infrastructure side and enable our partners within our IT teams -- our development partners, our application support partners, etc. -- to be able to transform the application stacks to be more cloud-capable and cloud-aware.

We started giving them the self-service capability on the infrastructure side, started on that infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) type capability, and then expanded into the platform-as-a-service (PaaS) capability across our database, application, and presentation layers.

Gardner: The good news with cloud is that you do away with manual processes and you have self-service and automation. The bad news is that you have self-service and automation, and they can get very complex and unwieldy, and like with virtual machines (VMs), sometimes there is a sprawl issue. How did you go about this in such a way that you didn’t suffer in terms of these new automation capabilities?

Spurling: I'm going to break it into two parts. Look at the complexity of an IT organization today, especially for a company of T-Mobile's size. T-mobile has 46,000 employees, around 43 million customers. It's not a small entity. The complexity that we have in the IT space mirrors that large complexity that we have in the business space.

Tough choices

We recognized on the infrastructure side, as well as in the application, test and support sides, that we cannot automate everything. We had to really drive heavy consolidation and standardization. We had to make some tough choices about the stuff that we were -- for lack of a better term -- going to pare off our infrastructure tree: different operating systems, different hardware platforms, and data centers that we were going to shut down.

We had to drive that heavy rationalization across all of the towers within our IT space, in order to enable the automation you talked about, without creating a significant amount of complexity.

On the sprawl question though, we made a conscious decision that we were going to allow or permit some level of sprawl, because of the business agility that was gained.

When you look at server sprawl, there are concerns around licensing, computer utilization, and stranding resources or assets. There are a lot of concerns around sprawl, but when you look at how much business benefit we got from enabling that agility or that speed to deliver and speed to market, the minimal amount of sprawl that was incurred was worth it from a business perspective.
You have to continue to deliver for your customers, but you need to prioritize what you are doing in that maintenance space.

We still try to manage it. We still make sure that we're utilizing our compute storage data centers, etc., as efficiently as possible, but we've almost back-burnered the sprawl issue in favor of enabling business.

Gardner: So with multiple platforms -- Windows, Linux, AIX, Unix -- and multiple data centers across large geographies, how can you do that without a larger staff? Do you find the centralization possible or is it really pie in the sky?

Spurling: It’s a bit of both. When you look at how much work there is to enable an automation solution, you almost have to be -- and my team hates it when I use the term -- ambidextrous. On one hand, you have to continue to deliver for your customers, but you need to prioritize what you are doing in that maintenance space and shave off a bit to invest in the innovation space.

You're going to have to make some capital investments, and maybe some resource investments as well, to drive that innovation the next step forward. But you almost have to do it within the space that you are coexisting in that maintains and innovates at the same time, because you can't drop one in favor of the other.

We did have to make some tradeoffs on the maintenance side, in order to take some qualified and some bright resources that we are excited about in our burgeoning cloud future, and then invest those resources to continue driving us forward in the technological and also cultural space. We made a significant cultural change too.

Gardner: That was going to be my next question. When it comes to making these transitions in technology, platform, and approach, I often hear companies say they have a lagging cultural shift as well. What did that involve in terms of your internal IT department making that shift more of a service bureau supporting your business like a business within a business?

Buggy whips

Spurling: A lot of times when you talk about evolution in either business context or kind of an academic context, you hear the story about the buggy whip. The buggy whip, back in the day, was something that everybody knew. About 125 years ago, everybody probably knew someone who made buggy whips or who sold buggy whips. Today, no one knows anybody who makes or sells buggy whips.

The buggy whip industry went away, but a brand-new industry emerged in the automobile space. In the same context. the old IT way of manually building servers, provisioning storage, and loading applications may be going away, but there is a brand-new environment that's been created in a higher value space.

As to the cultural shift you talked about, we had to make significant investments in our leadership to be able to help set a vision, show our employees where that vision intersected with their personal careers and how they continue to move on.

Then, you lead and help them to do that kind of emotional change. I'm not a server builder anymore. I'm now a consultant with the business on delivering a value, I'm now an automation engineer, or I'm now delivering future value and looking at new products that we can drive further automation into. That cultural change is ongoing, and it’s certainly not done.

Gardner: And given that this transition and transformation is fairly broad in terms of its impact, you don’t just buy this out of a box with your professional services. How did the combination of people, process, technology and outside your knowledge come together?
With those tools, with HP professional services, and with our own internal team members, we created a tactical team that went out there and "attacked cloud."

Spurling: When we started down the path, we had a lot of people in our teams who were really excited about making IT better. T-Mobile is full of people who are dedicated and excited about making T-Mobile the best wireless company out there. They're starting to change the conversation to make T-Mobile the best company that is enabling people to get access to the Internet, to their friends, to data, etc.

So the people were excited to jump on, but we still had a knowledge gap. We knew that, from a leadership perspective, we weren’t going to get the time to market that we wanted, by training our resources, helping them learn and make mistakes. We had to rely on professional services. So we partnered with HP very heavily to drive greater, instant-on services in our cloud solution.

On the technology side, we have everybody under the sun from a tooling perspective, but we do have a significant investment in HP software. We made a decision to move forward with the HP Cloud Suite. Pieces like HP Operations Orchestration (HPOO) or Cloud Service Automation (CSA), and building out those platforms to be the overarching cloud solution that, for lack of a better term, created that federation of loosely coupled systems that enabled cloud delivery.

With those tools, with HP professional services, and with our own internal team members, we created a tactical team that went out there and "attacked cloud," delivered that, and continues to deliver that now.

Paybacks

Gardner: Before we close out, and it might be too early in your journey to measure this, but are there any paybacks? Can you look at results, either business, technological, or financial from going to a cloud model, provisioning with that automation, advancing the technology, making those cultural hurdles? What do you get for it?

Spurling: I could talk for hours on this one question. When you break out all of the advances that we've made internally and all the business benefits that have been realized, you can break them into so many different categories, in green-dollar and blue-dollar saves, in resource saves, etc. I’ll highlight a few.

When we look at the cloud opportunity and the agility that has been gained, the ability to deliver things in an almost immediate fashion, one of the byproducts that we may not exactly have intended was that our internal customers have demanded in the past a lot of complexity or a lot of significant specific systems.

When we said, you can get that significant system, whatever it is, in a couple of weeks or you can get this cloud solution that delivers 95 percent of what you ask in a couple of hours, almost always those things that we thought were hard requirements melted away. The customer said, "You know what, I'm okay with this 95-percent deal because it gets me to my business objective faster."
Because of the investments we made in standardization and automation, our cloud portfolio, we were able to build out that capacity in record time.

Though we as IT thought you had to have that complexity, we're realizing now that that complexity may not have been required all along, because we are able to deliver so quickly. The byproduct of that is that we're seeing massive amounts of standardization that we could never have thought would organically be possible.

From an agility perspective, there's time to market. We had a significant launch with the iPhone, a big event in T-Mobile’s history, probably one of the largest launches that we've had. That required a significant amount of investment in our back-end systems because of the load that was put in our activations and payment inside our systems.

Because of the investments we made in standardization and automation, our cloud portfolio, we were able to build out that capacity in record time, in days versus what would have taken in weeks or months two years previously. We were able to support our business with very little lead time, and the results were very impressive for us as a business. So those two areas, that standardization and consolidation and that rapid ability to deliver on business objectives, are the two key ones that we take away.

Gardner: Daniel, let’s close out on the future. When you look to unforeseen events in your business, it could be mergers, acquisitions, changes in the market, new products, new applications, do you feel that the investments you’ve made in cloud also puts you in a position to be able to move rapidly? What future direction do you have in mind for your cloud trajectory?

Spurling: As I said in the beginning, we're just starting with cloud. That’s not fair to say. We are just continuing with cloud. We've done it in the past. We've used mainframes to distribute it.

Just one step

We’ve done application hosting with the Internet craze into software as a service (SaaS), that we now are seeing PaaS external to our internal organizations. We're seeing software to find everything starting to have a role. And there is a really interesting play that says, there is no end. Cloud is just one step in continuing to evolve IT to be more of a business partner.

That's really how we are looking at it. We're making great strides in that space. You talked about new applications or business mergers, etc. In every single area, we're setting ourselves up to be closer to the business, to move that self-service capability. I'm not just talking about a webpage. I am talking about being able to consume an IT service as a business leader in a simple way. We're moving that closer-and-closer to the business and we are being less and less of a gatekeeper for technology, which is super-exciting for us to see in the organization.

For us specifically, we're recognizing that the investments we made in our PaaS plays as well as test automation as well as some of the dev platforms. We're seeing those start to have payoffs in the fact that we're developing cloudware applications that are now scalable in a way that we've never seen before, without massive human invention.

So we're able to tell our business, "Go ahead and have a great marketing idea, and let’s move it forward. Let’s try that thing out. If it doesn't work, it’s not going to hurt IT. It's not going to take 18 months to deliver that." We're seeing IT able to respond about as fast as the business wants to go.
In every single area, we're setting ourselves up to be closer to the business, to move that self-service capability.

We are not there yet today. It’s a continuing journey, but that’s our trajectory in the next 6 to 12 months, and then who knows what’s going to happen, and we are excited to see.

Gardner: Well, great, I'm afraid we have to leave it there. We've been learning about how wireless services provider T-Mobile US, Inc. improved how it delivers cloud and data and applications to its enterprise customers, and we've seen how T-Mobile walked back the use of manual cloud provisioning and in order to move to a more advanced and automated approach and that has delivered some very impressive results.

So join me in thanking our guest, Daniel Spurling, Director of IT Infrastructure at T-Mobile US. Thanks so much.

Spurling: Thanks, Dana. It’s my pleasure.

Gardner: I'd like to thank our audience as well for joining us for this special HP Discover Performance podcast coming to you directly from the HP Discover 2013 Conference in Las Vegas.

I'm Dana Gardner, Principal Analyst at Interarbor Solutions, your host for this ongoing series of HP sponsored discussions. Thanks again for joining, and come back next time.

Listen to the podcast. Find it on iTunes. Download the transcript. Sponsor: HP.

Transcript of a BriefingsDirect podcast on how a major telecom company has improved their IT performance to deliver better experiences and payoffs for their businesses and end users alike. Copyright Interarbor Solutions, LLC, 2005-2013. All rights reserved.

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