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Design Your Cloud Operations

It’s “day two” in the cloud. Now what?

  • Traditional IT capabilities, activities, organizational structures, and culture need to adjust to leverage the value of cloud, optimize spend, and manage risk.
  • Different stakeholders across previously separate teams rely on one another more than ever, but rules of engagement do not yet exist.

Our Advice

Critical Insight

Define your target cloud operations state first, then plan how to get there. If you begin by trying to reconstruct on-prem operations in the cloud, you will build an operations model that is the worst of both worlds.

Impact and Result

  • Assess your key workflows’ maturity for life in the cloud and evaluate your readiness and need for new ways of working
  • Identify the work that must be done to deliver value in cloud services
  • Design your cloud operations framework and communicate it clearly and succinctly to secure buy-in

Design Your Cloud Operations Research & Tools

1. Design Your Cloud Operations Deck – A step-by-step storyboard to help guide you through the activities and tools in this project.

This storyboard will help you assess your cloud maturity, understand relevant ways of working, and create a meaningful design of your cloud operations that helps align team members and stakeholders.

2. Planning and design tools.

Use these templates and tools to assess your current state, design the cloud operations organizing framework, and create a roadmap.

3. Communication tools.

Use these templates and tools to plan how you will communicate changes to key stakeholders and communicate the new cloud operations organizing framework in an executive presentation.


Member Testimonials

After each Info-Tech experience, we ask our members to quantify the real-time savings, monetary impact, and project improvements our research helped them achieve. See our top member experiences for this blueprint and what our clients have to say.

9.7/10


Overall Impact

$89,999


Average $ Saved

50


Average Days Saved

Client

Experience

Impact

$ Saved

Days Saved

The Alberta Teachers Association

Workshop

9/10

$50,000

20

Nabeel was excellent and struck a great balance in getting to know our small team in the time we had and being very productive while we attended th... Read More

State of Michigan

Workshop

10/10

$129K

110

Franklly the last two questions in this survey. It's very difficult to come up with the "Time Saved" estimate due internal obsticles that must be ... Read More

Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada

Workshop

10/10

N/A

20

Very good workshop. Jeremy provided a lot of valuable information and got us working well together.


Workshop: Design Your Cloud Operations

Workshops offer an easy way to accelerate your project. If you are unable to do the project yourself, and a Guided Implementation isn't enough, we offer low-cost delivery of our project workshops. We take you through every phase of your project and ensure that you have a roadmap in place to complete your project successfully.

Module 1: Day 1

The Purpose

Establish Context

Key Benefits Achieved

Alignment on target state

Activities

Outputs

1.1

Assess current cloud maturity and areas in need of improvement

  • Cloud maturity assessment
1.2

Identify the drivers for organizational redesign

  • Project drivers
1.3

Review cloud objectives and obstacles

  • Cloud challenges and objectives
1.4

Develop organization design principles

  • Organization design principles

Module 2: Day 2

The Purpose

Establish Context

Key Benefits Achieved

Understanding of cloud workstreams

Activities

Outputs

2.1

Evaluate new ways of working

2.2

Develop a workstream target statement

  • Workstream target statement
2.3

Identify cloud work

  • Cloud operations workflow diagrams

Module 3: Day 3

The Purpose

Design the Organization

Key Benefits Achieved

Visualization of the cloud operations future state

Activities

Outputs

3.1

Design a future-state cloud operations diagram

  • Future-state cloud operations diagram
3.2

Create a current-state cloud operations diagram

  • Current-state cloud operations diagram
3.3

Define success indicators

  • Success indicators

Module 4: Day 4

The Purpose

Communicate the Changes

Key Benefits Achieved

Alignment and buy-in from stakeholders

Activities

Outputs

4.1

Create a roadmap

  • Roadmap
4.2

Create a communication plan

  • Communication plan

Design Your Cloud Operations

It’s “day two” in the cloud. Now what?

EXECUTIVE BRIEF

Analysts’ Perspective

The image contains a picture of Andrew Sharp.

Andrew Sharp

Research Director

Infrastructure & Operations Practice

It’s “day two” in the cloud. Now what?

Just because you’re in the cloud doesn’t mean everyone is on the same page about how cloud operations work – or should work.

You have an opportunity to implement new ways of working. But if people can’t see the bigger picture – the organizing framework of your cloud operations – it will be harder to get buy-in to realize value from your cloud services.

Use Info-Tech’s methodology to build out and visualize a cloud operations organizing framework that defines cloud work and aligns it to the right areas.

The image contains a picture of Nabeel Sherif.

Nabeel Sherif

Principal Research Director

Infrastructure & Operations Practice

The image contains a picture of Emily Sugerman.

Emily Sugerman

Research Analyst

Infrastructure & Operations Practice

Scott Young

Principal Research Director

Infrastructure & Operations Practice

Executive Summary

Your Challenge

Common Obstacles

Info-Tech’s Approach

Widespread cloud adoption has created new opportunities and challenges:

  • Traditional IT capabilities, activities, organizational structures, and culture need to adjust to leverage the value of cloud, optimize spend, and manage risk.
  • Different stakeholders across previously separate teams rely on one another more than ever, but rules of engagement do not yet exist, leading to a lack of direction, employee frustration, missed work, inefficiency, and unacceptable risk.
  • Many organizations have bought their way into a SaaS portfolio. Now, as key applications leave their network, I&O leaders still have accountability for these apps, but little visibility and control over them.
  • Few organizations are, or will ever be, cloud only. Your operations will be both on-prem and in-cloud for the foreseeable future and you must be able to accommodate both.
  • Traditional infrastructure siloes no longer work for cloud operations, but key stakeholders are wary of significant change.

Clearly communicate the need for operations changes:

  • Identify current challenges with cloud operations. Assess your readiness and fit for new ways of working involved in cloud operations: DevOps, SRE, Platform Engineering, and more.
  • Use Info-Tech’s templates to design a cloud operations organizing framework. Define cloud work, and align work to the right work areas.
  • Communicate the design. Gain buy-in from your key stakeholders for the considerable organizational change management required to achieve durable change.

Info-Tech Insight

Define your target cloud operations state first, then plan how to get there. If you begin by trying to reconstruct on-prem operations in the cloud, you will build an operations model that is the worst of both worlds.

Your Challenge

Traditional IT capabilities, activities, organizational structures, and culture need to adjust to leverage the value of cloud, optimize spend, and manage risk.

  • As key applications leave for the cloud, I&O teams are still expected to manage access, spend, and security but may have little or no visibility or control over the applications themselves.
  • The automation and self-service capabilities of cloud aren’t delivering the speed the business expected because teams don’t work together effectively.
  • Business leaders purchase their own cloud solutions because, from their point of view, IT’s processes are cumbersome and ineffective.
  • Accounting practices and governance mechanisms haven’t adjusted to enable new development practices and technologies.
  • Security and cost management requirements may not be accounted for by teams acquiring or developing solutions.
  • All of this contributes to frustration, missed work, wasteful spending, and unacceptable risk.

Obstacles, by the numbers:

85% of respondents reported security in the cloud was a serious concern.

73% reported balancing responsibilities between a central cloud team and business units was a top concern.

The average organization spent 13% more than they’d budgeted on cloud – even when budgets were expected to increase by 29% in the next year.

32% of all cloud spend was estimated to be wasted spend.

56% of operations professionals said their primary focus is cloud services.

81% of security professionals thought it was difficult to get developers to prioritize bug fixes.

42% of security professionals felt bugs were being caught too late in the development process.

1. Flexera 2022 State of the Cloud Report. 2. GitLab DevSecOps 2021 Survey

Cloud operations are different, but IT departments struggle to change

  • There’s no sense of urgency in the organization that change is needed, particularly from teams that aren’t directly involved in operations. It can be challenging to make the case that change is needed.
  • Beware “analysis paralysis”! With so many options, philosophies, approaches, and methodologies, it’s easy to be overwhelmed by choice and fail to make needed changes.
  • The solution to the problem requires organizational changes beyond the operations team, but you don’t have the authority to make those changes directly. Operations can influence the solution, but they likely can’t direct it.
  • Behavior, culture, and organizations take time and work to change. Progress is usually evolutionary – but this can also mean it feels like it’s happening too slowly.
  • It’s not just cloud, and it probably never will be. You’ll need to account for operating both on-premises and cloud technologies for the foreseeable future.

Follow Info-Tech’s Methodology

1. Ensure alignment with the risks and drivers of the business and understand your organization’s strengths and gaps for a cloud operations world.

2. Understand the balance of different types of deliveries you’re responsible for in the cloud.

3. Reduce risk by reinforcing the key operational pillars of cloud operations to your workstreams.

4. Identify “work areas,” decide which area is responsible for what tasks and how work areas should interact in order to best facilitate desired business outcomes.

The image contains a screenshot of a diagram demonstrating Info-Tech's Methodology, as described in the text above.

Info-Tech Insight

Start by designing operations around the main workflow you have for cloud services; i.e. If you mostly build or host in cloud, build the diagram to maximize value for that workflow.

Operating Framework Elements

Proper design of roles and responsibilities for each cloud workflow category will help reduce risk by reinforcing the key operational pillars of cloud operations.

We base this on a composite of the well-architected frameworks established by the top global cloud providers today.

Workflow Categories

  • Build
  • Host
  • Consume

Key Pillars

  • Performance
  • Reliability
  • Cost Effectiveness
  • Security
  • Operational Excellence

Risks to Mitigate

  • Changes to Support Model
  • Changes to Security & Governance
  • Changes to Skills & Roles
  • Replicating Old Habits
  • Misaligned Stakeholders

Cloud Operations Design

Info-Tech’s Methodology

Assess Maturity and Ways of Working

Define Cloud Work

Design Cloud Operations

Communicate and Secure Buy-in

Assess your key workflows’ maturity for “life in the cloud,” related to Key Operational Pillars. Evaluate your readiness and need for new ways of working.

Identify the work that must be done to deliver value in cloud services.

Define key cloud work areas, the work they do, and how they should share information and interact.

Outline the change you recommend to a range of stakeholders. Gain buy-in for the plan.

Blueprint deliverables

Each step of this blueprint is accompanied by supporting deliverables to help you accomplish your goals.

Cloud Maturity Assessment

Assess the intensity and cloud maturity of your IT operations for each of the key cloud workstreams: Consume, Host, and Build

The image contains screenshots of the Cloud Maturity Assessment.

Communication Plan

Identify stakeholders, what’s in it for them, what the impact will be, and how you will communicate over the course of the change.

The image contains a screenshot of the Communcation Plan.

Cloud Operations Design Sketchbook

Capture the diagram as you build it.

The image contains a screenshot of the Cloud Operations Design Sketchbook.

Roadmap Tool

Build a roadmap to put the design into action.

The image contains a screenshot of the Roadmap Tool.

Key deliverable:

Cloud Operations Organizing Framework

The Cloud Operations Organizing Framework is a communication tool that introduces the cloud operations diagram and establishes its context and justification.

The image contains a screenshot of the Cloud Operations Organizing Framework.

Project Outline

Phase 1: Establish Context

1.1: Identify challenges, opportunities, and cloud maturity

1.2: Evaluate new ways of working

1.3: Define cloud work

Phase 2: Design the organization and communicate changes

2.1: Design a draft cloud operations diagram

2.2: Communicate changes

Outputs

Cloud Services Objectives and Obstacles

Cloud Operations Workflow Diagrams

Cloud Maturity Assessment

Draft Cloud Operations Diagram

Communication Plan

Roadmap Tool

Cloud Operations Organizing Framework

Project benefits

Benefits for IT

Benefits for the business

  • Define the work required to effectively deliver cloud services to deliver business value.
  • Define key roles for operating cloud services.
  • Outline an operations diagram that visually communicates what key work areas do and how they interact.
  • Communicate needed changes to key stakeholders.
  • Receive more value from cloud services when the organization is structured to deliver value including:
    • Avoiding cost overruns
    • Securing services
    • Providing faster, more effective delivery
    • Increasing predictability
    • Reducing error rates

Calculate the value of Info-Tech’s Methodology

The value of the project is the delivery of organizational change that improves the way you manage cloud services

Example Goal

How this blueprint can help

How you might measure success/value

Streamline Responsibilities

The operations team is spending too much time fighting applications fires, which is distracting it from needed platform improvements.

  • Identify shared and separate responsibilities for development and platform operations teams.
  • Focus the operations team on securing and automating cloud platform(s).
  • Reduce time wasted on back and forth between development and operations teams (20 hrs. per employee per year x 50 staff = 1000 hrs.).
  • Deliver automation features that reduces development lead time by one hour per sprint (40 devs x 20 sprints per yr. x 1 hr. = 800 hrs.).

Improve Cost Visibility

The teams responsible for cost management today don’t have the authority, visibility, or time to effectively find wasted spend.

The teams responsible for cost management today don’t have the authority, visibility, or time to effectively find wasted spend.

  • Ensure operations contributes to visibility and execution of cost governance.
  • $1,000,000 annual spend on cloud services.
  • Of this, assume 32% is wasted spend ($320k).1
  • New cost management function has a target to cut waste by half next year saving ~$160k.
  • Cost visibility and capture metrics (e.g. accurate tagging metrics, right-sizing execution).
1. Average wasted cloud spend across all organizations, from the 2022 Flexera State of the Cloud Report

Understand your cloud vision and strategy before you redesign operations

Guide your operations redesign with an overarching cloud vision and strategy that aligns to and enables the business’s goals.

Cloud Vision

The image contains a screenshot of the Define Your Cloud Vision.

Cloud Strategy

It is difficult to get or maintain buy-in for changes to operations without everyone on the same page about the basic value proposition cloud offers your organization.

Do the workload and risk analysis to create a defensible cloud vision statement that boils down into a single statement: “This is how we want to use the cloud.”

Once you have your basic cloud vision, take the next step by documenting a cloud strategy.

Establish your steering committee with stakeholders from IT, business, and leadership to work through the essential decisions around vision and alignment, people, governance, and technology.

Your cloud operations design should align to a cloud strategy document that provides guidelines on establishing a cloud council, preparing staff for changing skills, mitigating risks through proper governance, and setting a direction for migration, provisioning, and monitoring decisions.

Key Insights

Focus on the future, not the present

Define your target cloud operations state first, then plan how to get there. If you begin by trying to reconstruct on-prem operations in the cloud, you will build an operations model that is the worst of both worlds.

Responsibilities change in the cloud

Understand what you mean by cloud work

Focus where it matters

Cloud is a different way of consuming IT resources and applications and it requires a different operational approach than traditional IT.

In most cases, cloud operations involves less direct execution and more service validation and monitoring

Work that is invisible to the customer can still be essential to delivering customer value. A lot of operations work is invisible to your organization’s customers but is required to deliver stability, security, efficiency, and more.

Cloud work is not just applications that have been approved by IT. Consider how unsanctioned software purchased by the business will be integrated and managed.

Start by designing operations around the main workflow you have for cloud services. If you mostly build or host in the cloud, build the diagram to maximize value for that workflow.

Design principles will often change over time as the organization’s strategy evolves.

Identify skills requirements and gaps as early as possible to avoid skills gaps later. Whether you plan to acquire skills via training or cross-training, hiring, contracting, or outsourcing, effectively building skills takes time.

Info-Tech offers various levels of support to best suit your needs

DIY Toolkit

Guided Implementation

Workshop

Consulting

“Our team has already made this critical project a priority, and we have the time and capability, but some guidance along the way would be helpful.”“Our team knows that we need to fix a process, but we need assistance to determine where to focus. Some check-ins along the way would help keep us on track.”“We need to hit the ground running and get this project kicked off immediately. Our team has the ability to take this over once we get a framework and strategy in place.”“Our team does not have the time or the knowledge to take this project on. We need assistance through the entirety of this project.”

Diagnostics and consistent frameworks used throughout all four options

Guided Implementation

What does a typical GI on this topic look like?

Phase 1

Phase 2

Call #1: Scope requirements, objectives, and your specific challenges

Calls #2&3: Assess cloud maturity and drivers for org. redesign

Call #4: Review cloud objectives and obstacles

Call #5: Evaluate new ways of working and identify cloud work

Calls #6&7: Create your Cloud Operations diagram

Call #8: Create your communication plan and build roadmap

A Guided Implementation (GI) is a series of calls with an Info-Tech analyst to help implement our best practices in your organization.

Workshop Overview

Contact your account representative for more information.
workshops@infotech.com 1-888-670-8889

Day 1

Day 2

Day 3

Day 4

Day 5

Establish Context

Design the Organization and Communicate Changes

Next Steps and
Wrap-Up (offsite)

Activities

1.1 Assess current cloud maturity and areas in need of improvement

1.2 Identify the drivers for organizational redesign

1.3 Review cloud objectives and obstacles

1.4 Develop organization design principles

2.1 Evaluate new ways of working

2.2 Develop a workstream target statement

2.3 Identify cloud work

3.1 Design a future-state cloud operations diagram

3.2 Create a current state cloud operations diagram

3.3 Define success indicators

4.1 Create a roadmap

4.2 Create a communication plan

5.1 Complete in-progress deliverables from previous four days.

5.2 Set up review time for workshop deliverables and to discuss next steps.

Deliverables

  1. Cloud Maturity Assessment
  2. Cloud Challenges and Objectives
  1. Workstream target statement
  2. Cloud Operations Workflow Diagrams
  1. Future and current state cloud operations diagrams
  1. Roadmap
  2. Communication Plan

Cloud Operations Organizing Framework.

Phase 1:

Establish context

Phase 1

Phase 2

1.1 Establish operating model design principals by identifying goals & challenges, workstreams, and cloud maturity

1.2 Evaluate new ways of working

1.3 Identify cloud work

2.1 Draft an operating model

2.2 Communicate proposed changes

Phase Outcomes:

Define current maturity and which workstreams are important to your organization.

Understand new operating approaches and which apply to your workstream balance.

Identify a new target state for IT operations.

Before you get started

Set yourself up for success with these three steps:

  • This methodology and the related slides are intended to be executed via intensive, collaborative working sessions using the rest of this slide deck.
  • Ensure the working sessions are successful by working through these steps before you start work on defining your cloud operations.

1. Identify an operations design working group

2. Review cloud vision and strategy

3. Create a working folder

This should be a group with insight into current cloud challenges, and with the authority to drive change. This group is the main audience for the activities in this blueprint.

Review your established planning work and documentation.

Create a repository to house your notes and any work in progress.

Create a working folder

15 minutes

Create a central repository to support transparency and collaboration. It’s an obvious step, but one that’s often forgotten.

  1. Download all the documents associated with this blueprint to a shared repository accessible to all participants. Keep separate folders for templates and work-in-progress.
  2. Share the link to the repository with all attendees. Include links to the repository in any meeting invites you set up as working sessions for the project.
  3. Use the repository for all the work you do in the activities listed in this blueprint.

It’s “day two” in the cloud. Now what?

About Info-Tech

Info-Tech Research Group is the world’s fastest-growing information technology research and advisory company, proudly serving over 30,000 IT professionals.

We produce unbiased and highly relevant research to help CIOs and IT leaders make strategic, timely, and well-informed decisions. We partner closely with IT teams to provide everything they need, from actionable tools to analyst guidance, ensuring they deliver measurable results for their organizations.

MEMBER RATING

9.7/10
Overall Impact

$89,999
Average $ Saved

50
Average Days Saved

After each Info-Tech experience, we ask our members to quantify the real-time savings, monetary impact, and project improvements our research helped them achieve.

Read what our members are saying

What Is a Blueprint?

A blueprint is designed to be a roadmap, containing a methodology and the tools and templates you need to solve your IT problems.

Each blueprint can be accompanied by a Guided Implementation that provides you access to our world-class analysts to help you get through the project.

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Guided Implementation 1: Establish Context
  • Call 1: Scope requirements, objectives, and your specific challenges
  • Call 2: Assess cloud maturity and drivers for org. redesign
  • Call 3: Review cloud objectives and obstacles
  • Call 4: Evaluate new ways of working and identify cloud work

Guided Implementation 2: Design the Organization and Communicate Changes
  • Call 1: Create your cloud operations diagram
  • Call 2: Create your communication plan and build roadmap

Authors

Nabeel Sherif

Scott Young

Andrew Sharp

Contributors

  • Nenad Begovic, Executive Director, Head of IT Operations, MUFG Investor Services
  • Desmond Durham, Manager, ICT Planning & Infrastructure, Trinidad & Tobago Unit Trust Corporation
  • Virginia Roberts, Director, Enterprise IT, Denver Water
  • Denis Sharp, IT/LEAN Consultant
  • 3 anonymous contributors
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