CFO Expectations of IT


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Cloud based information banks will deliver interest for CIOs

Vendor insight: information banking offers archive and intelligence on CIOs information assets

Cloud computing is much talked about. By taking advantage of the convergence of affordable and ubiquitous broadband, mass storage, and mobile computing, cloud computing gives CIOs a better way to provision, deploy, and support business services. When implemented properly, cloud computing makes a large number of information services more secure, less expensive, and easier to operate. It simplifies business processes, development releases, and the software lifecycle, and makes it easier to amortize operational costs across multiple organisations.

So far cloud computing has been about service consolidation, not service innovation. Amongst the cloud services available, it's challenging to name any innovations. The same was true of personal computers before the release of VisCalc.

Eventually, new platforms almost inevitably begin to enable new applications, and that's where to look for the next big thing.

Throughout the history of computing, innovation has been partially predictable; by examining the newest capabilities, one is likely to find areas most ripe for innovation. So what does cloud computing do that's actually new, rather than just more efficient?

Cloud computing provides centralised storage, support, and deployment for a business' information. Such centralised, archival-quality storage is still quite rare; even mighty IBM, for example, distributes the email for its 400,000 workers onto hundreds of servers spread around the globe, making it nearly impossible to perform comprehensive operations on its archives as a whole. But what might you do if you had all your data in one place, professionally administered and with computing resources to spare?

Traditionally, archives are where data goes to die; information is retrieved from archives only in the event of a disaster, legal requirement, or other uncommon event. Such archives are like safe deposit boxes in banks; they keep things safe and secure, but don't do anything else. By contrast, a modern bank pays interest and offers a wide variety of products to help customers get the most from their assets.

An integrated cloud-based archive can begin to offer similar services with business data. Information banking is to traditional archiving as modern banking is to medieval treasury vaults. Not only is your information kept securely, but it is analysed in a variety of ways for your benefit, providing "interest" in the form of business intelligence and other services. Information previously locked up in static archives is increasingly retargeted to your organisation when and how it is most useful.

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There are three approaches by which information banks can unlock the hidden value of archives: deeper business intelligence, open API's for archive access, and proactive information exploitation:

1. Business intelligence functions of various kinds can be supercharged by putting them atop an information bank. For the first time, a business's entire data can be made available as a whole for sophisticated analysis. This will lead to deeper insights, data visualisation, and reporting – none of which are new, but all of which are evolutionarily better with the availability of comprehensive archives.

An illustrative example is the analysis of social networks. With a complete archive of internal corporate communications, we can automatically build highly accurate and detailed visualisations of the interconnections between employees. Research suggests that this will yield highly actionable results; for example, most organisations tend to have employees who are "key connectors", providing rare links between different parts of the organisation. Unfortunately, such employees often get poor performance reviews, or are even fired, because the time they spend linking the company together translates into fewer deliverables. An information banking platform will make it possible, for the first time, for managers to consider an employee's communication activities in performance reviews.

2. The power of a single, integrated repository for all of an organisation's information is unlikely to be fully exploited by a single entity, even the bank itself. To reach its full potential, such information needs to be accessible to third party developers. Thus, a key part of the value proposition of an information bank is an API for exploiting it, leading naturally to the notion of an "app store" for business archives.

Third parties are traditionally much quicker to find and exploit niche needs, and are likely to develop creative information banking applications designed specifically for lawyers, or financial service companies, or other businesses with specific needs.



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