Many of us started our careers without computers, cell phones, or the world wide web. Frankly, I wish I had a video documentary of HOW we accomplished anything at all because I simply can’t remember or imagine it.
Pat Ryan, of Idea2, ran a design firm in Denver, Colorado. He CAN remember it.
“I remember having to DRAW designs by hand, take them to a service joint that made BLUEPRINTS, then I would have them couriered over to the client. I would MAIL the contract documents and wait for a check to show back up in the MAIL… before computers. On Monday, I would CALL a contractor’s office, leave a message for his secretary to call me back, wait a day for him to get the message and call my answering machine and leave a message. Then I would get his message and call his secretary back and by the end of the week, I would reach him and ask him the question I posed on Monday. I am amazed anything could get done. Really.”
The CLOUD is the term that is being applied to describe an assortment of technologies, services, applications and ideas that are so varied and disparate that the word actually makes sense. For businesses – the thing to focus on is where they belong in the value chain of the cloud. Common roles can be:
- Consumer
- Distributor
- Aggregator
- Supplier
For most companies of any size, one or more of these roles can help them become better, grow, or adapt to changing business climates. Almost all businesses can consume cloud services. The easiest business cases to make are using services like:
- Hosted Exchange
- Hosted CRM (shameless plug for Idea2)
- Online back-up and recovery
It rarely makes sense for small business to own servers for these applications. For the most part, the services that are available online provide consistently good, routinely upgraded, fully backed up solutions that cost far less than having these systems in-house.