The turnaround in the field of cloud computing is making businesses inquire about the impact of this technology on work practices. Resultantly, companies are undergoing a transformation in IT security and data availability across verticals.
Here is brief confab on some reflections about the development of cloud over the past few years. Through this blog, I have also tried to throw some light on the predictions related to cloud in the upcoming year.
As a matter if fact, rules of businesses have changed today. Firms are now looking forward to servicing an experiential economy. As a result of this providers have begun to differentiate themselves on the basis of experience rendered by customers who are now interacting with various products and services within their organizations.
Certain organizations have accepted the theory of ‘service management’ for the transformation of IT department into comprehensive service provider. Such a setup delivers and supports information systems in the form of a service. As a result, advantages of ‘Cloud Computing’ have made accelerated business functions as expectancy for responsive and reasonably priced IT opportunities. This has automatically led to the use of information systems as a convenient utility.
At present, industry analysts, leaders as well as vendors have begun to concur IT organizations as the façade of hybrid cloud environments. Such facilities contain the amalgamation of service infrastructures which are hosted as well as managed cursorily. This is prevalent within ‘public’ clouds but the same process is carried out internally inside a ‘private’ cloud.
Thanks to the institutionalisation of cloud as a service management practices, working practices are now witnessing a major alteration. Recent survey conducted across companies and interactions with a certain number of CIOs has confirmed the agility of novel cloud based services. These solutions are supposedly quicker than predicted lines. Hence it can be treated as a clear opportunity for the re-imagination of IT organization and service streams across our cloud dominated universe.
Therefore, cloud computing has already spurred a long lasting impact on traditional IT service management theories. This is going to serve as a ready platform for service management portfolios in the next generation. Such strategies have been designed to assist IT professionals in ensuring their initiatives as well as practices within education programs. Ultimately they become relevant for the end users & customers.









