The human cost of cloud – what does it mean for tech jobs?

April 26, 2011 Off By David
Object Storage
Grazed from Cloud Pro.  Author: Billy Macinnes.

The main drivers pushing businesses towards the adoption of some form of cloud computing are frequently expressed in terms of reducing capital and operating costs while simplifying the ongoing management of IT systems. The arguments for cloud computing have become familiar and well-rehearsed in recent years: it’s cost-effective, quick and easy to implement, gives businesses the ability to run the latest and greatest software and to scale upwards (and downwards) as required.

But what are the human consequences of adopting cloud-based computing, including SaaS? The arguments put forward by those resistant to change (or “server huggers” as one industry player terms them) typically revolve around a potential loss of control to the business and fears over the robustness of data security. But for many people, especially in IT departments where the effects of any shift to remote provision of computing resources will be felt most keenly, the anxieties are possibly more visceral because these changes are likely to affect their own livelihoods. Some of those cost savings are going to come from salaries.

For the previous 20 years or more, the major casualties of the huge adoption of IT in business have been those employed in other functions and parts of a company’s operation outside of computing. But the cloud computing wave is bound to be felt much more keenly by the IT department or those employed in an IT function within a business. Supporting such a shift could, to use the well-worn cliche, be like "turkeys voting for Christmas”. Hardly surprising, then, that cloud computing has typically found greater enthusiasm from the business than the IT department.

It would be reassuring to think IT has learned a form of best practice, derived from its own experiences in implementing systems that have affected other areas of the business, for dealing with the introduction of technology and systems that will have significant effects on its own structure, but there appears little evidence for this. Given that so much IT time and resource is spent "keeping the lights on”, it’s understandable there is a reluctance to look beyond the devil they already know but cloud computing is likely to have profound consequences for IT personnel.

Those who are perceived to be resistant to the shift to the cloud are less likely to prosper than their colleagues who are able to appreciate the potential of cloud-based solutions and use it as a means to develop a better understanding of what IT can do for the business. As the extent of cloud-based delivery of IT and services develops, the requirement will shift from reactive, firefighting roles towards a focus on the strategic and analytical. Much of the day to day mechanical aspects of the IT function will be handled offsite. IT staff worried about their place in a future that encompasses cloud-based solutions would do well to try and view it as an opportunity rather than a threat.

While there is a potential for the business to use the cloud as a mechanism to reduce headcount, it can also be viewed as an opportunity for IT staff to evolve their roles to something more strategic and incremental that adds value to the business.